Behavioral and Accumbal Responses During an Affective Go/No-Go Task Predict Adherence to Injectable Naltrexone Treatment in Opioid Use Disorder

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Abstract

Adherence is a major factor in the effectiveness of the injectable extended-release naltrexone as a relapse prevention treatment in opioid use disorder. We examined the value of a variant of the Go/No-go paradigm in predicting extendedrelease naltrexone adherence in 27 detoxified opioid use disorder patients who were offered up to 3 monthly extendedrelease naltrexone injections. Before extended-release naltrexone, participants performed a Go/No-go task that comprised positively valenced Go trials and negatively valenced No-go trials during a functional magnetic resonance imaging scan. Errors of commission and neural responses to the No-go vs Go trials were independent variables. Adherence, operationalized as the completion of all 3 extended-release naltrexone injections, was the outcome variable. Fewer errors of commission and greater left accumbal response during the No-go vs Go trials predicted better adherence. These findings support the clinical potential of the behavioral and neurophysiological correlates of response inhibition in the prediction of extended-release naltrexone treatment outcomes in opioid use disorder.

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Shi, Z., Jagannathan, K., Wang, A. L., Fairchild, V. P., Lynch, K. G., Suh, J. J., … Langleben, D. D. (2019). Behavioral and Accumbal Responses During an Affective Go/No-Go Task Predict Adherence to Injectable Naltrexone Treatment in Opioid Use Disorder. International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology, 22(3), 180–185. https://doi.org/10.1093/ijnp/pyz002

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