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The use of baclofen as a treatment for alcohol use disorder: A clinical practice perspective

The use of baclofen as a treatment for alcohol use disorder: A clinical practice perspective
The use of baclofen as a treatment for alcohol use disorder: A clinical practice perspective
Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is a brain disorder associated with high rates of mortality and morbidity worldwide. Baclofen, a selective gamma-aminobutyric acid-B (GABA-B) receptor agonist, has emerged as a promising drug for AUD. The use of this drug remains controversial, in part due to uncertainty regarding dosing and efficacy, alongside concerns about safety. To date there have been 15 randomized controlled trials (RCTs) investigating the use of baclofen in AUD; three using doses over 100 mg/day. Two additional RCTs have been completed but have not yet been published. Most trials used fixed dosing of 30–80 mg/day. The other approach involved titration until the desired clinical effect was achieved, or unwanted effects emerged. The maintenance dose varies widely from 30 to more than 300 mg/day. Baclofen may be particularly advantageous in those with liver disease, due to its limited hepatic metabolism and safe profile in this population. Patients should be informed that the use of baclofen for AUD is as an “off-label” prescription, that no optimal fixed dose has been established, and that existing clinical evidence on efficacy is inconsistent. Baclofen therapy requires careful medical monitoring due to safety considerations, particularly at higher doses and in those with comorbid physical and/or psychiatric conditions. Baclofen is mostly used in some European countries and Australia, and in particular, for patients who have not benefitted from the currently used and approved medications for AUD.
GABA-B, Baclofen, alcohol use disorder, efficacy, Safety
1664-0640
1-16
de Beaurepaire, Renaud
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Sinclair, Julia
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Heydtmann, Mathis
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Addolorato, Giovanni
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Aubin, Henri-Jean
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Beraha, Esther M.
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Caputo, Fabio
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Chick, Jonathan D.
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de la Selle, Patrick
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Franchitto, NIcolas
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Garbutt, James C.
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Haber, Paul S.
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Jaury, Philippe
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Lingford-Hughes, Anne
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Morley, Kirsten C
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Muller, Christian A
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Owens, Lynn
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Pastor, Adam
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Paterson, Louise M.
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Pelissier, Fanny
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Rolland, Benjamin
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Stafford, Amanda
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Thompson, Andrew
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van den Brink, Wim
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Leggio, Lorenzo
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Agabio, Roberta
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de Beaurepaire, Renaud
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Sinclair, Julia
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Heydtmann, Mathis
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Addolorato, Giovanni
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Aubin, Henri-Jean
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Beraha, Esther M.
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Caputo, Fabio
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Chick, Jonathan D.
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de la Selle, Patrick
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Franchitto, NIcolas
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Garbutt, James C.
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Haber, Paul S.
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Jaury, Philippe
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Lingford-Hughes, Anne
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Morley, Kirsten C
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Muller, Christian A
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Owens, Lynn
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Pastor, Adam
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Paterson, Louise M.
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Pelissier, Fanny
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Rolland, Benjamin
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Stafford, Amanda
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Thompson, Andrew
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van den Brink, Wim
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Leggio, Lorenzo
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Agabio, Roberta
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de Beaurepaire, Renaud, Sinclair, Julia, Heydtmann, Mathis, Addolorato, Giovanni, Aubin, Henri-Jean, Beraha, Esther M., Caputo, Fabio, Chick, Jonathan D., de la Selle, Patrick, Franchitto, NIcolas, Garbutt, James C., Haber, Paul S., Jaury, Philippe, Lingford-Hughes, Anne, Morley, Kirsten C, Muller, Christian A, Owens, Lynn, Pastor, Adam, Paterson, Louise M., Pelissier, Fanny, Rolland, Benjamin, Stafford, Amanda, Thompson, Andrew, van den Brink, Wim, Leggio, Lorenzo and Agabio, Roberta (2019) The use of baclofen as a treatment for alcohol use disorder: A clinical practice perspective. Frontiers in Psychiatry, 9, 1-16, [708]. (doi:10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00708).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is a brain disorder associated with high rates of mortality and morbidity worldwide. Baclofen, a selective gamma-aminobutyric acid-B (GABA-B) receptor agonist, has emerged as a promising drug for AUD. The use of this drug remains controversial, in part due to uncertainty regarding dosing and efficacy, alongside concerns about safety. To date there have been 15 randomized controlled trials (RCTs) investigating the use of baclofen in AUD; three using doses over 100 mg/day. Two additional RCTs have been completed but have not yet been published. Most trials used fixed dosing of 30–80 mg/day. The other approach involved titration until the desired clinical effect was achieved, or unwanted effects emerged. The maintenance dose varies widely from 30 to more than 300 mg/day. Baclofen may be particularly advantageous in those with liver disease, due to its limited hepatic metabolism and safe profile in this population. Patients should be informed that the use of baclofen for AUD is as an “off-label” prescription, that no optimal fixed dose has been established, and that existing clinical evidence on efficacy is inconsistent. Baclofen therapy requires careful medical monitoring due to safety considerations, particularly at higher doses and in those with comorbid physical and/or psychiatric conditions. Baclofen is mostly used in some European countries and Australia, and in particular, for patients who have not benefitted from the currently used and approved medications for AUD.

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de Beaurepaire et al. 2019 - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 3 December 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 4 January 2019
Published date: 4 January 2019
Keywords: GABA-B, Baclofen, alcohol use disorder, efficacy, Safety

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 429112
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/429112
ISSN: 1664-0640
PURE UUID: 88dc33ce-bfb2-4d4e-ae3a-d791e9c91b3f
ORCID for Julia Sinclair: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1905-2025

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Date deposited: 21 Mar 2019 17:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:55

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Contributors

Author: Renaud de Beaurepaire
Author: Julia Sinclair ORCID iD
Author: Mathis Heydtmann
Author: Giovanni Addolorato
Author: Henri-Jean Aubin
Author: Esther M. Beraha
Author: Fabio Caputo
Author: Jonathan D. Chick
Author: Patrick de la Selle
Author: NIcolas Franchitto
Author: James C. Garbutt
Author: Paul S. Haber
Author: Philippe Jaury
Author: Anne Lingford-Hughes
Author: Kirsten C Morley
Author: Christian A Muller
Author: Lynn Owens
Author: Adam Pastor
Author: Louise M. Paterson
Author: Fanny Pelissier
Author: Benjamin Rolland
Author: Amanda Stafford
Author: Andrew Thompson
Author: Wim van den Brink
Author: Lorenzo Leggio
Author: Roberta Agabio

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