Pubdate: Sat, 22 Dec 2007
Source: Toronto Star (CN ON)
Copyright: 2007 The Toronto Star
Contact:  http://www.thestar.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/456
Author: Megan Ogilvie, Health Reporter
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment)

CAN A DRUG CURE AN ADDICT?

Researchers Are Working On A Vaccine That Could Neuter The Effects Of 
Narcotics Like Cocaine. Some Experts Warn This Magic Bullet Could Backfire

A man is at a downtown loft party. He knows he shouldn't be there, 
but a friend convinced him it would be a good time, one not to miss.

The music, the short skirts and familiar faces set off an urge he has 
been fighting for six months. It's been that long since he last cut 
cocaine. And he swore to stay clean.

But tonight, the pull is too strong. In a bathroom, after a quick 
exchange, he gets his fix.

He waits a few minutes. Yet the euphoria does not come. The vaccine 
worked - it stopped the cocaine molecules swirling in his blood from 
reaching his brain - and the man, even after giving in to temptation, 
does not spiral back into addiction.

The man in this scenario does not exist. But in as few as five years, 
this experience could be very real for the hundreds of thousands of 
people in North America who struggle with cocaine addiction.

In an ever-widening search to treat addiction, scientists have homed 
in on vaccines as a way to help people kick their habits for good. 
They say the powerful technology holds promise as an innovative way 
to treat drugs of abuse, including cocaine, methamphetamine, and even nicotine.

Human trials for the nicotine and cocaine vaccines are already well 
under way and have yielded good results. The National Institute for 
Drug Abuse in the U.S. has put $15 million toward research.

The promise of a magic bullet, a quick fix that would tear people 
away from drug dependency, is enticing to researchers, clinicians and 
addicts alike. But even as the technology is being perfected in 
laboratories, experts doubt that a single type of treatment will be 
able to solve addiction, a complex puzzle that affects dozens of 
brain processes and arises from myriad environmental, economic and 
social situations.

Anti-addiction vaccines also come with a host of ethical dilemmas: 
Should parents be allowed to inoculate their children against cocaine 
and nicotine?

Should convicted drug offenders have to be vaccinated against their 
illegal habit before entering prison? Should a vaccine be forced upon 
people, whether a person with mental illness or a pregnant mother, to 
protect their health?

Despite these concerns, proponents say vaccines, if and when they are 
shown to be safe and effective, will hold an important niche in 
addiction treatment and therapy.

There needs to be a wide variety of options since people respond 
differently to different treatments, says Margaret Haney, an 
associate professor of clinical neuroscience at Columbia University 
who studies medications, including a vaccine, to treat cocaine dependence.

Right now, she says, there are not enough medications available to 
treat most types of drugs of abuse, particularly cocaine.

"A vaccine is not going to cure cocaine addiction," she says.

"But there is a subset of people who will benefit from this approach 
. There is a great call out there among people who are dependent, and 
from their family members, for something to help."

Anti-addiction vaccines employ immunotherapy and work by setting the 
body's immune system against drug molecules floating in the blood.

Normally, cocaine and nicotine molecules are too small for the body 
to recognize and easily pass from the bloodstream into the brain, 
where they set off pleasure receptors and produce a high.

To create a vaccine, scientists pair drug molecules with proteins to 
increase their overall size.

This forces the body to recognize them and to start producing 
antibodies against them.

After several inoculations, a patient who tries to use drugs will 
have enough antibodies in their blood to fight the new drug 
molecules, which are then prevented from reaching the brain.

The antibodies are excreted with no lasting effects.

Since vaccines target drugs before they reach the brain, scientists 
predict patients should experience fewer side effects.

Most other medications used to treat addiction work by changing 
neural pathways in the brain that mediate the effects of a particular drug.

At Columbia, in 2003, Haney tested a cocaine vaccine on 10 people who 
had no plans to quit using the drug.

After a course of four vaccines injected over a 12-week period, half 
of the people produced sufficient levels of cocaine antibodies and 
reported a substantial decrease, up to a 70 per cent drop, in their dependence.

Haney says the results are exciting.

One of the concerns with a cocaine vaccine is that once inoculated 
against a cocaine high, determined users will seek other drugs. But 
Haney's subjects did not do that.

"On the outside, they were using less cocaine. They just stopped. 
None of them switched to another drug of abuse."

A 2005 Yale University clinical trial of 18 cocaine addicts in early 
treatment found that cocaine antibodies persisted in the blood six 
months after inoculation, and subjects reported the usual euphoric 
effect of cocaine had diminished.

Clinical trials of nicotine vaccines have also met with success and 
experts say one of these vaccines will likely hit the market in as 
little as three years.

A 2005 clinical trial out of the University of Minnesota looked at 
NicVAX, a vaccine produced by Nabi Biopharmaceuticals based in Boca 
Raton, Fla. It found 38 per cent of smokers who received a higher 
dose of the vaccine quit smoking for one month, compared with 9 per 
cent of the placebo group.

"This is proof of principle that this (vaccine) can help people quit 
smoking," says study author Dorothy Hatsukami, the Forster family 
professor in cancer prevention at the University of Minnesota.

She sees the vaccine as a tool to help determined quitters from relapsing.

"Nothing is going to be a miracle cure," she says.

"Cigarette smoking is about more than just the drug itself. It 
includes a lot of things, the social environment, the pleasure 
sensory of smoking, using it to deal with stress. There are a lot of 
factors associated with smoking that people still need to deal with 
. It (quitting) will still be a struggle, but it's always good to 
have something to help with the struggle."

Scientists who are working on anti-addiction vaccines see both the 
promise and the challenges that lay ahead.

Before the nicotine or cocaine vaccines can get to market, scientists 
have to figure out how to make them more effective, says Paul Pentel, 
professor of medicine and pharmacology at the University of Minnesota 
and a pioneer in the field.

It is clear, he says, from the three nicotine and one cocaine 
clinical trials that the more antibodies a person can produce, the 
better their chance of not using the drug. The clinical trials have 
also shown that not everybody who gets the vaccine will produce 
enough antibodies. Scientists don't yet exactly know why this happens.

"It needs to be improved to be generally useful and to get the most 
out of it," says Pentel.

Experts also say the mounting excitement over anti-addiction vaccines 
has to be tempered. Many people think of vaccines as a cure-all. And 
in most cases that is true; a shot against, say, measles, will 
prevent the disease from striking.

But anti-addiction vaccines work more like medication, says Pentel. 
People will likely need multiple doses over many months or years. 
Vaccines won't curb cravings or deal with the underlying reasons for 
addiction. And, in their current form, they certainly will not stop 
people from seeking drugs in the first place.

Haney at Columbia is adamant that people are not vaccinated against their will.

"If parents want to vaccinate their kids, I feel very strongly that 
that will be a disaster," she says. "The only appropriate use is for 
somebody who is very motivated to quit."

Tony George, a professor and chair in addiction psychiatry at the 
University of Toronto, says anti-addiction vaccines will be used in 
treatment programs once they are proven to be safe and effective. 
Clinicians are always looking to have more tools to help clients stay 
clean for good.

"This will be a bonus to our armoury," he says. "It just increases 
our repertoire and our chances of success."

*SIDEBAR*

A recovering addict cautions

Cheryl Peever, left, has been clean and sober for more than 16 years. 
Her substance abuse problem started in her teens and quickly 
spiralled into periods of bingeing on alcohol and drugs.

In her late 20s, things got worse. She started to drink and use every 
day and even began to deal.

"I had no personality, no soul, no moral compass at that point," she 
says. "I was nothing more than a vessel you poured drugs into."

Peever said there came a moment when she realized she needed 
treatment. And, after some difficulties negotiating the system, she 
found her way into a 12-step program and pulled herself out of addiction.

Looking back on her struggle to get clean, Peever, who is now manager 
of the women's mental health program at Toronto's Centre for 
Addiction and Mental Health, is not sure whether she would have 
trusted a drug, even if it was a vaccine, to help her kick the cocaine habit.

In her mind, she says, it would be too dangerous to substitute one 
drug for another.

"I think it can't be used as a stand-alone treatment," she says. 
"There's a lot of recreating soul and personality that goes into 
recovery. It's not just stopping behaviours."

After a short pause, Peever reconsiders and says it could be useful 
as one part of a treatment plan. She points out that an anti-cocaine 
vaccine won't stop all of the behavioural and environmental triggers, 
from the stuffed-up feeling in the nose during a cold to watching a 
movie character taking drugs, that coax someone into using again.

She appreciates that scientists - and even addicts - would like to 
have a quick fix, but says researchers often do not understand what 
it's like to live with addiction.

"There are a lot of systemic issues that keep addiction alive," she says.

"Extreme poverty, mental illness, lack of adequate housing and 
childcare, these all keep it (addiction) going and prevent people 
from moving on and getting treatment. A vaccine developed in a 
laboratory isn't addressing these issues. It's a nice little piece of 
the puzzle, but it's only one piece."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom