STANDARD ADDICTION TREAMENTS CAN BE USED IN PROBLEM
GAMBLING
11 December 2009
Researchers report success with medications
often used for substance addictions
The annual meeting of the American College of
Neuropsychopharmacology was told this week that
pathological gambling can be successfully treated with
medications that decrease urges and increase
inhibitions.
Researchers presented findings that
show positive outcomes in gamblers treated with
medications often used for substance addictions.
Dr. Jon Grant and his team at the University of
Minnesota used tasks that measure cognition to identify
what motivates this extreme type of gambling behaviour.
They enrolled men and women with a primary diagnosis of
pathological gambling in one of three medication
studies. Study sites varied in size from 70 to 100
participants.
In order to group individuals into
categories that address differences in their biology,
Grant separated pathological gamblers into two major
subtypes: gamblers who are driven by urge (i.e.,
individuals who report gambling when the desire becomes
too strong to control), and those who do not show normal
inhibition of impulsive behaviours (i.e., individuals
who report being unable to restrict behaviours even when
urges are minimal or virtually non-existent).
In
the first subtype, gamblers who are driven by urge
responded well to treatment with medications that block
the brain opioid system (e.g., naltrexone) or certain
receptors for the neurotransmitter glutamate (e.g.,
memantine).
Grant also found that family history
plays an important role in refining this group even
further. People with a family history of addiction
responded even better to the opioid blocker, which has
been shown in other studies to decrease the urge to use
substances such as alcohol.
The second subtype,
gamblers who have difficulty inhibiting their behaviours
and react to the smallest desires, respond well to
medications that act on a specific enzyme, catechol-O-methyl-transferase
(COMT), which plays a major role in the function of the
prefrontal cortex. Researchers found that decreasing
the function of COMT can increase one's ability to
inhibit their desire to gamble.
"By understanding these different
subtypes, we are able to target the core biology of the
illness with individualized treatment," said Jon Grant,
MD, JD, MPH, Associate Professor of Psychiatry at the
University of Minnesota and ACNP member.
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