Overview
Chantix for Treating Cocaine Dependence
Status:
Completed
Completed
Trial end date:
2009-09-01
2009-09-01
Target enrollment:
0
0
Participant gender:
All
All
Summary
The purpose of this study is to determine whether varenicline (Chantix), is effective for the treatment of cocaine dependence.Phase:
Phase 2Accepts Healthy Volunteers?
NoDetails
Lead Sponsor:
University of PennsylvaniaCollaborator:
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)Treatments:
Cocaine
Varenicline
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:- Males and females, 18 to 65 years old.
- Meets DSM-IV criteria for Cocaine Dependence, as determined by the Structured Clinical
Interview for DSM-IV (SCID).
- Live within a commutable distance of the Treatment Research Center (TRC) at the
Penn/VA Center for Studies of Addiction, University of Pennsylvania. We define this to
be a distance within the service area of Septa, within an hour drive, or a distance
that both the patient and Principal Investigator (PI) find acceptable.
- Understands and signs the informed consent.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Current DSM-IV diagnosis of any psychoactive substance dependence other than cocaine
or nicotine dependence, as determined by the SCID.
- Concomitant treatment with psychotropic medications.
- Current or prior gambling problems. This will be assessed by the patient's
self-report.
- Patients mandated to treatment based upon a legal decision or as a condition of
employment. This will be assessed by the patient's self-report.
- Current severe psychiatric symptoms, e.g., psychosis, dementia, suicidal or homicidal
ideation, mania or depression requiring antidepressant therapy in the opinion of the
Principal Investigator (PI)
- Use of any investigational medication within the past 30 days.
- History of significant heart disease (an arrhythmia which required medication,
Wolff-Parkinson -White Syndrome, angina pectoris, documented history of myocardial
infarction, heart failure).
- History of chest pain associated with cocaine use that has prompted a visit to a
physician.
- Current use of naltrexone, disulfiram, modafinil, stimulants, reserpine, verapamil,
theophylline, trimethoprim, cimetidine, haloperidol, benzodiazepines or
anticonvulsants.
- Known hypersensitivity to varenicline.
- Patients with known AIDS or other serious illnesses that may require hospitalization
during the study.
- Female subjects who are pregnant or lactating, or female subjects of child-bearing
potential who are not using acceptable methods of birth control.
Acceptable methods of birth control include:
- barrier (diaphragm or condom) with spermicide
- intrauterine progesterone contraceptive system
- levonorgestrel implant
- medroxyprogesterone acetate contraceptive injection
- oral contraceptives.
- tubal ligation.
- Patients with impaired renal function as indicated by corrected creatinine clearance
below 80 ml/min/70 kg as determined by the modified Cockcroft equation (CDC, 1986).
- Clinical laboratory tests (CBC, blood chemistries, urinalysis) outside normal limits
that are clinically unacceptable to the Principal Investigator. EKG 1st degree heart
block, sinus tachycardia, left axis deviation, and nonspecific ST or T wave changes
are allowed; liver function tests [LFTs] <5 x ULN are acceptable).