Clinical trials for stimulant use disorders: addressing heterogeneities that may undermine treatment outcomes

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Abstract

In recent years, use of cocaine and amphetamines and deaths associated with stimulants have been on the rise, and there are still no FDA-approved medications for stimulant use disorders. One contributing factor may involve heterogeneity. At the neurobiological level, dual dopamine dysfunction may be undermining medication efficacy, suggesting a need for combination pharmacotherapies. At the population level, individual variability is expressed in a number of ways and, if left unaddressed, may interfere with medication efficacy. This chapter reviews studies investigating medications to address dopamine dysfunction, and it also identifies several prominent heterogeneities associated with stimulant (and other substance) use disorders. The chapter has implications for improving interventions to treat stimulant use disorders, and the theme of individual heterogeneity may have broader application across substance use disorders.

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Regier, P. S., Kampman, K. M., & Childress, A. R. (2020). Clinical trials for stimulant use disorders: addressing heterogeneities that may undermine treatment outcomes. In Handbook of Experimental Pharmacology (Vol. 258, pp. 299–322). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/164_2019_303

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