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      Nalmefene and alcohol dependence: A new approach or the same old unacceptable marketing?

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      Substance Abuse and Rehabilitation
      Dove Medical Press

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          Abstract

          Dear editor “A great deal of intelligence can be invested in ignorance when the need for illusion is deep”. Saul Bellow Paille and Martini’s review on nalmefene for alcohol dependence deserves some comment.1 First, the authors stated no conflict of interest despite both repeatedly received money from Lundbeck laboratories, the company marketing nalmefene (eg, http://www.lundbeck.com/fr/a-propos-de-lundbeck/transparence-des-liens and https://www.transparence.sante.gouv.fr/flow/main?execution=e2s1). We recently challenged such unprofessional behavior in a French journal where authors also masked their conflicts of interest and provided an inaccurate analysis.2 Second, the data analysis is flawed and failed to discuss the limitations. a. Nalmefene [17-N-cyclopropylmethyl-3,14-dihydroxy-4,5-beta-alpha-epoxy-6 methylenemorphinan hydrochloride (10365 NIH)], is a simple 6-methyl derivative of naltrexone. Its origin goes back to early 1980. Naltrexone is a drug that had a marketing authorization on validated and rigorous criteria (abstinence) and all the related numerous independent trials using a solid methodology are consistent.3,4 Instead, nalmefene is characterized by a dystocia. In 1998, Contral Pharma tried to develop nalmefene against alcohol use disorders. The trials in this indication like in other more anecdotal conditions (eating behavior, memory disorder, bronchospasm, pruritus, cystitis …) have been unsuccessful, the results failing to reach statistical significance. The Lundbeck laboratory acquired the patent for this somewhat forgotten molecule and tried to relaunch its development. b. “If you torture the data enough, nature will Always confess”. Ronald Coase. All three trials (Sense 1, 2 and 3) exhibit poor results, which may explain why these have not been published in the core clinical journals unlike the pivotal trials of acamprosate or naltrexone.4–6 Sense 1 and 2 trials were pooled to provide a basis for the marketing authorization with a post hoc analysis of a subgroup of patients – representing only ¼ of the cohort, this is far from an intention to treat analysis.7,8 There were too many missing data and too many patients were lost to follow-up.9 Sense 3 study is not significant regarding the 4 endpoint measures (both primary and secondary).10 But the authors underlined significant results for endpoints at the 13th month despite this was not in the original protocol of the study. Last, there is a significant bias of attrition, only 61% of patients in the nalmefene group completing the study against 67% in the placebo group. c. The endpoint (consumption of alcohol) was on a declarative basis and no objective measures commonly used in the tests were retained: alcohol, CDT (carbohydrate deficient transferrin) or ethyl glucuronide (hair or urine).11 d. The endpoint was not validated. The decrease in consumption is a surrogate endpoint and so far no study has shown it could reduce hospitalization, morbidity, or mortality rates. A decrease in consumption could be a temporary solution to develop the therapeutic alliance when a patient is not ready for abstinence. However, considering this endpoint as a success is nothing but hype or a hoax. The paradigm of reducing risks is well established for the risk of infection with a drug addict. Reducing risk by reducing consumption remains a myth. It goes back to 1973, but the extended follow-up of the cohort has shown that this concept was inappropriate.12 All studies testing a decrease in consumption failed to show evidence for effectiveness.13 What would we say if a drug against morbid obesity had a marketing authorization without data on weight or morbidity because it allows patients to refrain from eating one slice of pizza per day?14 The marketing authorization from the European Medicines Agency relied on a “white paper” on accepting the decrease in consumption as a surrogate endpoint. This position is not accepted by the FDA. The “white paper” was authored by van den Brink who has received fees from Lundbeck, as all investigators publishing nalmefene trials.7,8,10 Sense 3 was also published in a journal where the two publishers were also paid by Lundbeck and failed to respond to a request to publish a brief critical analysis of the trial (A Braillon, personal communication, 2015).10 e. It was neither scientific nor ethical not to compare nalmefene to a validated treatment that received a marketing authorization. Helsinki declaration (1964) stated that any experimental maneuver was to be compared to the best available care as a comparator (Article II.2). It was possible to build such comparative tests. Third, independent evaluations are negative. a. The independent drug bulletin Prescrire concluded: “In both trials, patients taking nalmefene declared two “heavy drinking days” per month less than patients in the placebo groups. Daily consumption of alcohol was 5–9 grams lower with nalmefene than with placebo. The most common side effects are insomnia, dizziness, headache and nausea, which were severe in more than 10% of patients. Other serious but less common side effects include confusion, hallucination and dissociation, usually at the beginning of the treatment. These side effects have affected about 3% of patients treated with nalmefene, a figure three times higher than in the placebo groups. The consequences of nalmefene mixed with large amounts of alcohol are not known. In practice, the clinical relevance of nalmefene in alcohol-dependent patients seeking to reduce or abstain is questionable. The impact of nalmefene on alcohol dependence complications is not known. The crucial first step in the management of alcohol-dependent patients is to establish a relationship based on trust and to provide psychological and social support. When drugs are considered, it is best to choose acamprosate or naltrexone, drugs that are only moderately effective but better evaluated”.15 b. The Drug Evaluation German Agency (IQWIG) made its conclusion on December 1: “Nalmefene for alcohol dependence: no benefit evidenced” (https://www.iqwig.de/en/press/press-releases/press-releases/nalmefene-for-alcohol-dependence-added-benefit-not-proven.6458.html). c. The French Health Authority concluded that nalmefene trials showed little evidence for an improvement in actual benefit when compared to existing treatments (rating =4, on a scale of 5 to 1, the highest). The agency advised to restrict prescription to addiction specialists considering the major importance of psycho-social care, a difficult condition to achieve in general practice. Such restriction is rarely used by the Commission (http://www.has-sante.fr/portail/jcms/c_1737894/en/selincroenct12915english-version). d. The Swedish Agency for health assessment concluded (March 31, 2015) to the lack of interest of nalmefene compared to existing treatments and did not recommend its reimbursement (http://www.tlv.se/beslut/beslut-lakemedel/avslag-uteslutningar/Selincro-ingar-inte-i-hogkostnadsskyddet/). Fourth, who will benefit from nalmefene? Monthly cost for nalmefene in France is €101.34 vs €36.07 for naltrexone. The psychosocial support, a key element in the care of patients with addiction but it is not reimbursed by the health care scheme. Accordingly, this money could have been better used to cover two monthly psychologist visits. Fifth, on June 19, 2013, the European Commission imposed a €93.8 million fine to Lundbeck for having offered payments and other bribes to other companies who accepted to delay the marketing of their cheaper generic of citalopram. The Vice-President of the Commission Joaquín Almunia said: “Agreements of this type (breach of EU antitrust rules. Article 101 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union) directly affect patients and national health systems, which are already subject to strict budget constraints” (http://www.europeanvoice.com/article/almunia-fines-lundbeck-and-rivals-for-fudging-competition-on-medicines/).

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          Most cited references20

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          Efficacy and tolerability of long-acting injectable naltrexone for alcohol dependence: a randomized controlled trial.

          Alcohol dependence is a common disorder associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Naltrexone, an opioid antagonist, has been shown to be effective for treatment of alcohol dependence. However, adherence to daily oral pharmacotherapy can be problematic, and clinical acceptance and utility of oral naltrexone have been limited. To determine efficacy and tolerability of a long-acting intramuscular formulation of naltrexone for treatment of alcohol-dependent patients. A 6-month, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial conducted between February 2002 and September 2003 at 24 US public hospitals, private and Veterans Administration clinics, and tertiary care medical centers. Of the 899 individuals screened, 627 who were diagnosed as being actively drinking alcohol-dependent adults were randomized to receive treatment and 624 received at least 1 injection. An intramuscular injection of 380 mg of long-acting naltrexone (n = 205) or 190 mg of long-acting naltrexone (n = 210) or a matching volume of placebo (n = 209) each administered monthly and combined with 12 sessions of low-intensity psychosocial intervention. The event rate of heavy drinking days in the intent-to-treat population. Compared with placebo, 380 mg of long-acting naltrexone resulted in a 25% decrease in the event rate of heavy drinking days (P = .02) [corrected] and 190 mg of naltrexone resulted in a 17% decrease (P = .07). Sex and pretreatment abstinence each showed significant interaction with the medication group on treatment outcome, with men and those with lead-in abstinence both exhibiting greater treatment effects. Discontinuation due to adverse events occurred in 14.1% in the 380-mg and 6.7% in the 190-mg group and 6.7% in the placebo group. Overall, rate and time to treatment discontinuation were similar among treatment groups. Long-acting naltrexone was well tolerated and resulted in reductions in heavy drinking among treatment-seeking alcohol-dependent patients during 6 months of therapy. These data indicate that long-acting naltrexone can be of benefit in the treatment of alcohol dependence.
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            Meta-analysis of naltrexone and acamprosate for treating alcohol use disorders: when are these medications most helpful?

            Although debates over the efficacy of oral naltrexone and acamprosate in treating alcohol use disorders tend to focus on their global efficacy relative to placebo or their efficacy relative to each other, the underlying reality may be more nuanced. This meta-analysis examined when naltrexone and acamprosate are most helpful by testing: (i) the relative efficacy of each medication given its presumed mechanism of action (reducing heavy drinking versus fostering abstinence) and (ii) whether different ways of implementing each medication (required abstinence before treatment, detoxification before treatment, goal of treatment, length of treatment, dosage) moderate its effects. A systematic literature search identified 64 randomized, placebo-controlled, English-language clinical trials completed between 1970 and 2009 focused on acamprosate or naltrexone. Acamprosate had a significantly larger effect size than naltrexone on the maintenance of abstinence, and naltrexone had a larger effect size than acamprosate on the reduction of heavy drinking and craving. For naltrexone, requiring abstinence before the trial was associated with larger effect sizes for abstinence maintenance and reduced heavy drinking compared with placebo. For acamprosate, detoxification before medication administration was associated with better abstinence outcomes compared with placebo. In treatment for alcohol use disorders, acamprosate has been found to be slightly more efficacious in promoting abstinence and naltrexone slightly more efficacious in reducing heavy drinking and craving. Detoxification before treatment or a longer period of required abstinence before treatment is associated with larger medication effects for acamprosate and naltrexone respectively. Published 2012. This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.
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              Talk is cheap: measuring drinking outcomes in clinical trials.

              To evaluate the correspondence among measures of self-reported drinking, standard biological indicators and the reports of collateral informants, and to identify patient characteristics associated with observed discrepancies among these three sources of research data. Using data collected from a large-scale clinical trial of treatment matching with alcoholics (N = 1,726), these three alternative outcome measures were compared at the time of admission to treatment and at 12 months after the end of treatment. Patient self-reports and collateral reports agreed most (97.1%) at treatment admission when heavy drinking was unlikely to be denied. In contrast, liver function tests were relatively insensitive, with positive serum gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (GGTP) values obtained from only 39.7% of those who admitted to heavy drinking. At 15-month follow-up the correspondence between client self-report and collateral report decreased to 84.7%, but agreement with blood chemistry values increased to 51.6%. When discrepancies occurred, they still indicated that the client' s self-report is more sensitive to the amount of drinking than the biochemical measures. Patients who presented discrepant results tended to have more severe drinking problems, more previous treatments, higher levels of pretreatment drinking and significantly greater levels of cognitive impairment, all of which could potentially interfere with accurate recall. In clinical trials using self-selected research volunteers, biochemical tests and collateral informant reports do not add sufficiently to self-report measurement accuracy to warrant their routine use. Resources devoted to collecting these alternative sources of outcome data might be better invested in interview procedures designed to increase the validity of self-report information.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Subst Abuse Rehabil
                Subst Abuse Rehabil
                Substance Abuse and Rehabilitation
                Substance Abuse and Rehabilitation
                Dove Medical Press
                1179-8467
                2015
                29 June 2015
                : 6
                : 75-80
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Alcohol Treatment Unit, University Hospital, Amiens, France
                [2 ]Psychiatry, Tarnier Hospital (AP-HP), Paris, France
                Department of Addiction Treatment, University Hospital, Vandoeuvre-lès-Nancy, France
                Author notes
                Correspondence: Alain Braillon, Alcohol Treatment Unit, University Hospital, Amiens, France, Email braillon.alain@ 123456gmail.com
                [*]

                Both authors contributed equally to this work

                Correspondence: F Paille, Service d’Addictologie, bâtiment P Canton, CHU de Nancy-Brabois, Allée du Morvan, F-54500 Vandoeuvre-lès-Nancy, France, Email secretariat.pr.paille@ 123456chu-nancy.fr
                Article
                sar-6-075
                10.2147/SAR.S86007
                4492660
                26170732
                9eb16743-4c70-4af6-ae85-f030ca24c52f
                © 2015 Braillon and Granger. This work is published by Dove Medical Press Limited, and licensed under Creative Commons Attribution – Non Commercial (unported, v3.0) License

                The full terms of the License are available at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/. Non-commercial uses of the work are permitted without any further permission from Dove Medical Press Limited, provided the work is properly attributed.

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