Pubdate: Fri, 14 Nov 2003
Source: The Scientist (US)
Copyright: 2003 The Scientist, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.the-scientist.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/623
Author: Richard Robinson

NEUROSCIENTISTS ON DRUGS

SfN participants say new understanding of addiction has had little effect on
gov't policy

NEW ORLEANS - Although the understanding of the neurobiology of addiction
has grown substantially in the last decade, this has not had much of an
effect on federal drug policy, a roundtable of neurobiologists,
policymakers, and criminologists said at the 33rd Annual Meeting of the
Society for Neuroscience earlier this week.

Glen Hanson, former director and now assistant director of the National
Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), said during the discussion on Tuesday
(November 11) that among policymakers, drug abuse is seen through the
opposing lenses of science and morality, and as a result, science often
takes a back seat.

He offered as an example a government agency that asked for NIDA's
imprimatur on a policy statement opposing needle replacement for HIV
prevention. NIDA's exhaustive analysis of published studies found that
needle replacement programs not only reduced HIV, but also decreased drug
use, because addicts were more likely to be drawn into treatment programs.
But instead of changing the policy statement, the agency issued it without
NIDA as a cosignatory, and NIDA officials were castigated for not being
'team players.' But neither did NIDA issue its own statement disagreeing
with the policy. 'Sometimes you have to pick your battles,' said Hanson.

NIDA Director Nora Volkow said that very long-term downregulation of
dopamine receptors in the prefrontal cortex and elsewhere dampen the
addicted brain's ability to respond to pleasure and other salient stimuli.
Over time, drugs alone can provide the dopamine reward. At the same time,
and perhaps even more importantly, changes in other brain centers reduce the
signals that usually exert inhibitory control. 'Without that,' said Volkow,
'your ability to refrain, to say 'Maybe I shouldn't do it,' will be
diminished.' Because of these long-lasting receptor changes, which are very
well modeled in animal systems, Volkow said that addicts lose the ability
even to recognize when the drug is no longer reinforcing: 'I don't even know
why I take the drug' is a common refrain among addicts, she said.

The behavioral changes brought on by these neurobiological alterations last
long after withdrawal of the drug, according to Charles P. O'Brien, vice
chairman of the department of psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania.
Once you're addicted, he said, 'just saying no really doesn't work.' No one
type of treatment - psychotherapy, twelve-step programs, medication - is
successful alone for the large majority of patients, he said. Neither can
short-term treatment bring about long-term change for most addicts: 'This is
a chronic disease - it doesn't go away.' New types of drugs that reduce
craving are proving effective in clinical trials, O'Brien said, cutting
relapse rates in half, but these are still not widely used in addiction
treatment programs. 'Neuroscience-based treatments are not getting used,
although they could help society,' he said.

But 'judges and parole officers don't know any of this,' said Douglas B.
Marlowe of the Treatment Research Institute at the University of
Pennsylvania. 'How has neuroscience penetrated social policy? The answer
pretty obviously is not at all,' he said. On the other hand. Marlowe noted,
it may not be appropriate to apply conclusions about severe addicts to other
drug abusers: 'That's where we tend to get into trouble.'

Eighty percent of inmates are drug involved, said Marlowe, and 'all of them,
for all intents and purposes return to their pre-prison drug use' shortly
after release. 'You can't punish people enough to change their brain
chemistry,' he said. 'Prison has no effect on the drug use of offenders.'

Neither, unfortunately, does much else, Marlowe said. Without coercion, up
to two thirds of addicts don't show up for their intake appointments at
community treatment centers, and more than half the remainder drop out
within 3 months. Even in highly monitored programs, 'there are, at best,
small effects on high-risk addicts,' said Marlowe.

A newer approach, called leveraged treatment, may be somewhat more
effective. In this system, punishment - prison, eviction, loss of child
custody - is withheld as long as the addict continues treatment, success is
rewarded frequently, and the severity of threatened sanctions is gradually
eased as progress is made. 'For a drug addict, waiting a year is like
waiting a lifetime,' said Marlowe.

While acknowledging the sorry state of the current criminalistic approach to
drug use, none of the panelists favored widespread drug legalization. It's a
'bumper sticker solution to a complex problem,' O'Brien said.
'Decriminalization is not such a straightforward answer,' Volkow said.
O'Brien did predict that marijuana laws are likely to ease soon, but Volkow
countered that while there is no evidence that marijuana is toxic to the
developing brain, neither is there any that it is not toxic. 'What are the
consequences of messing with the cannabinoid system in adolescence?' she
asked. 'Our mission is to bring science to these questions,' she said, not
to advocate for policies without enough evidence.

Links for this article

A. Katsnelson, 'Ethics, public education at SfN,' The Scientist, November
13, 2003. http://www.biomedcentral.com/news/20031113/07/

National Institute on Drug Abuse http://www.drugabuse.gov/

Charles P. O'Brien http://www.med.upenn.edu/ins/faculty/obrien.htm

Douglas B. Marlowe 
http://www.uphs.upenn.edu/trc/assessment_treatment/investigator
s/marlowebio.html
- ---
MAP posted-by: Josh