Gabapentin is Effective in Alcohol Use Disorder in Patients with Alcohol Withdrawal Symptoms
Researcher Raymond F. Anton and colleagues reported in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine that compared with placebo, the anticonvulsant medication gabapentin helped people with alcohol use disorders reduce their drinking or abstain from drinking, especially those who had more withdrawal symptoms before treatment.
Ninety-six participants were randomized to receive either placebo or 1200mg/day of gabapentin for 16 weeks.
In the study, 27% of participants who took gabapentin had no heavy drinking days (compared to 9% among those who took placebo) and 18% achieved total abstinence (compared to 4% among those who took placebo). Gabapentin was most effective in those with a history of alcohol withdrawal symptoms. An impressive 41% of participants with high alcohol withdrawal symptoms who took gabapentin achieved total abstinence compared with 1% of participants in the placebo group.
Gabapentin, which is used to treat epilepsy, influences GABA and glutamate transmitters and inhibits the alpha 2gamma-1 voltage sensitive calcium channel, which is upregulated in chronic alcohol exposure.
Gabapentin May Increase Opioid-Related Deaths
The anticonvulsant gabapentin is sometimes prescribed for chronic pain conditions along with opioids. A 2017 article by researcher Tara Gomes in the journal PLOS Medicine reports that compared to opioid prescriptions alone, co-prescription of gabapentin increases the risk of an opioid-related death by 49%. The risk was increased by 60% for those receiving moderate or high doses of gabapentin (those above 900 mg/day).
The increased risk when the drugs are taken together may be because both gabapentin and opioids depress the respiratory system. Opioids also slow the gastrointestinal system, meaning that more gabapentin is absorbed by the intestines than occurs when gabapentin is prescribed alone.
Gomes and colleagues looked at cases of patients who were prescribed opioids and had opioid-related deaths, and matched these with similar patients who had not died while taking prescription opioids during the same time period. The researchers found that having taken gabapentin in the previous 120 days dramatically increased the risk of death from opioid-related causes.
Gomes and colleagues suggest that caution should be used when prescribing gabapentin and opioid drugs at the same time.