Journal article
Guanfacine decreases symptoms of cannabis withdrawal in daily cannabis smokers
M Haney, ZD Cooper, G Bedi, E Herrmann, SD Comer, SC Reed, RW Foltin, FR Levin
Addiction Biology | WILEY | Published : 2019
DOI: 10.1111/adb.12621
Abstract
The α2a-adrenergic agonist, lofexidine, reduced cannabis withdrawal-related sleep disruption in the laboratory, but side effects (e.g. fatigue, hypotension) limit its utility as a treatment for cannabis use disorder. This study tested the potential efficacy and tolerability of a daily bedtime administration of the FDA-approved α2a-adrenergic agonist, guanfacine, in a human laboratory model of cannabis use disorder. Daily, nontreatment-seeking cannabis smokers (13M, 2F) completed a within-subject study comprising two 9-day inpatient study phases. Each phase tested the effects of daily placebo or immediate-release guanfacine (2 mg) on cannabis intoxication (5.6 percent THC; 2 days), withdrawal..
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Awarded by National Institute on Drug Abuse
Funding Acknowledgements
Dr. Haney's research is funded by NIDA. She and Dr Cooper have received partial salary support for an investigator-initiated study from Insys Therapeutics Inc. testing the effects of cannabidiol on laboratory measures of pain. The other authors have no potential conflicts of interest.