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<text id=89TT3275>
<title>
Dec. 11, 1989: Can Drugs Cure Drug Addiction?
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
Dec. 11, 1989 Building A New World
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
MEDICINE, Page 104
Can Drugs Cure Drug Addiction?
</hdr><body>
<p>Researchers are developing new treatments to battle abuse
</p>
<p>By Andrew Purvis
</p>
<p> When methadone was first introduced 24 years ago, it was
hailed as a magic bullet aimed at the heart of heroin addiction.
A neat, clean medical solution to a social problem. It has
proved to be something less than that. Methadone is a treatment,
not a cure, for addiction, and an imperfect one at that. But for
some 100,000 of the country's half-million heroin addicts, it
offers an alternative to shooting up as well as the possibility
of a productive life.
</p>
<p> With the crack epidemic spiraling out of control and the
continuing threat of AIDS transmission through needle sharing,
the research community and government leaders are showing new
interest in medical approaches to drug addiction. After nearly
a decade of relative neglect under the "Just Say No" Reagan
Administration, the Federal Government has sharply increased
funding to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, which sponsors
almost all of the world's drug-abuse research. In the past year
NIDA's medications and basic-research budget jumped 50%, to $75
million, and Congress promises similar increases in the future.
"It's the Manhattan Project for chemists in the war on drugs,"
declares Duncan Taylor, a senior researcher at Bristol-Myers.
</p>
<p> The most promising of several drugs to combat addiction
that are being tested is buprenorphine, a pain reliever that in
early trials has shown clear advantages over methadone as a
treatment for heroin addiction. Under development by a team at
Yale University, the drug, like methadone, induces a generalized
feeling of contentment rather than heroin's precipitate rush and
euphoria. It is at least as effective as methadone in easing
physical withdrawal and reducing cravings, and it is
significantly more potent in blocking heroin's high if the
addict tries to shoot up again. Unlike methadone, buprenorphine
is relatively nonaddictive and carries almost no risk of
overdose. In one trial of 41 addicts on methadone maintenance,
it cut the number of those who continued to take heroin to just
over half and eased 18 off opiates altogether.
</p>
<p> As a bonus, buprenorphine seems radically to suppress the
urge to take cocaine, which is abused by an estimated 70% to 80%
of heroin addicts. Methadone also tends to reduce coke use, but
less dramatically. While methadone may wean half of those
treated from cocaine, buprenorphine could slash the number of
coke abusers to almost nil, says Yale researcher Thomas Kosten.
A Harvard study of rhesus monkeys habituated to using coke found
that daily doses of buprenorphine led the monkeys to kick the
habit completely.
</p>
<p> Other medications being used for psychiatric or
neurological conditions are also showing some promise.
Flupenthixol, currently prescribed overseas for schizophrenia,
seems to soften the "crash," a unique combination of depression
and craving that follows one cocaine binge and typically leads
to another round. In preliminary trials on a group of ten
Bahamian crack addicts seeking treatment, researchers from Yale
found that even low doses kept users off cocaine for the
two-month duration of the trial. Another drug, carbamazepine,
long taken to prevent seizures, has proved to be moderately
effective against cocaine craving. In tests this year, six of
13 people taking the drug stopped using cocaine and the
remaining seven reduced their intake about two-thirds.
Researchers got the idea for using this antiseizure drug after
hearing reports that low doses of cocaine triggered
mini-seizures in some animal brains and that this "kindling" in
the brain might be linked to craving. By next year, NIDA expects
to have eight to twelve antiaddiction medications in clinical
trials.
</p>
<p> Still, scientists are not expecting miracles, particularly
in battling cocaine addiction. Unlike heroin, which acts on the
pain-killing endorphin system alone, cocaine engages three
separate neurotransmitter systems: those based on dopamine,
serotonin and norepinephrine. Taken together, these networks
govern the human ability to experience pleasure, from watching
a sunrise to having sex. Blocking all these pleasure centers --
as methadone blocks the heroin high -- would literally take the
joy out of life, says Yale's Kosten. "We'd turn out automatons."
Addicts trying to quit cocaine go through a stage called
anhedonia, a sort of spiritless limbo that typically drives the
user to take the drug again. At best, researchers can hope for
a patchwork of drugs to block discrete stages of cocaine
withdrawal, such as craving and depression.
</p>
<p> It is far from clear that the new drugs will succeed even
in this limited way. None have been tested in a full-scale
trial designed to mimic the conditions addicts encounter on the
street. Buprenorphine, which is one of the furthest along in
testing, is unlikely to receive approval before 1992. Scientists
also readily concede that medical therapy fails to address the
underlying psychological and social causes of drug abuse. Even
if an addict is weaned from one drug, they say, he will very
often take up another. A federal study released in August found
that as many as 47% of patients at 15 methadone clinics across
the country continued to use heroin or other opiates, and up to
40% used nonopiate drugs, usually cocaine. So scientists find
themselves aiming their magic bullet at a moving target. "We're
constantly having to treat new disease," said Marvin Snyder,
director of NIDA's medications-development program. "In five
years, the problem may not be cocaine, but some drug we haven't
even heard of."
</p>
</body></article>
</text>