Orexin s Role in the Neurobiology of Substance Use Disorder
NCT05630781 · Status: RECRUITING · Phase: NA · Type: INTERVENTIONAL · Enrollment: 140
Last updated 2026-04-13
Summary
Study Description:
Despite the availability of pharmacotherapy for some substance use disorders, relapse vulnerability is still a significant issue. This suggests medications with alternative mechanisms of action should be explored to address this unmet need. Substantial preclinical research indicates that orexin antagonism blunts the internally and externally triggered motivation to attain abused substances. This research project will translate these preclinical findings into the clinical domain by administering the FDA approved orexin antagonist, suvorexant, to those with a substance use disorder. Suvorexant s ability to blunt neurobiological correlates of substance misuse will be assessed. This will be assessed following acute and repeated drug administration. Baseline individual differences will be considered to determine whether neurobiological variance influences suvorexant s impact in those with nicotine dependence. In an independent arm, the interaction between suvorexant and a dopamine agonist (methylphenidate) on cognitive function will be assessed in non-smoking individuals.
Objectives:
The objective is to determine the acute and chronic impact of the orexin antagonist, suvorexant, on neurobiological and behavioral factors linked with substance use disorders. Whether such effects are mediated by baseline characteristics will be tested. Given suvorexant is an FDA approved treatment for insomnia, sleep will be evaluated as well in the nicotine dependent arm.
Endpoints:
In nicotine-dependent individuals, suvorexant s impact on brain function will be assessed several ways by evaluating: 1) resting function, 2) reactivity to drug cues, 3) reactivity to non-drug related cognitive tasks. Sleep and nicotine use will be measured throughout the study period. In those without nicotine-dependence, the impact of suvorexant and the interaction of acute methylphenidate and suvorexant on brain function will be assessed. This arm will provide insight into how suvorexant impacts reward/cognition as well as impacts the pharmacological influence of methylphenidate on those same measures.
Study Population:\<TAB\>
Nicotine dependence arm:140 subjects; Volunteers who are between the ages of 18-60 and are daily smokers/vapers.
Control arm: 80 subjects; Volunteers who are between the ages of 18-60 and are non-smokers/vapers
This study will be conducted at the NIDA-IRP, Biomedical Research Center, in Baltimore, MD.
Description of Study Intervention:
Nicotine dependence arm: Suvorexant at 10 mg single dose, and Suvorexant at 10 mg daily for approximately 7 days.
Control arm: 1. Tolerability visit with one MRI scan post-20mg methylphenidate, 4 acute drug administration (6-14 days in randomized order: 1. Placebo + placebo; 2. 20mg suvorexant + Placebo; 3. Placebo + 40mg methylphenidate; 4. 20 mg suvorexant + 40mg methylphenidate max)
Study Duration:
5 years
Participant Duration:
1-2 months
Conditions
- Nicotine Dependence
Interventions
- DRUG
-
Belsomra
randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover design study: Participants will undergo a baseline scan followed by 2 acute drug administration scans where suvorexant or placebo is administered in a randomized manner where both the participant and study staff administering drug are blind. Following the second acute scan, participants will continue with the drug they received at Scan 2 for approximately 7 days. After the first chronic scan, participants will switch to the other drug for an additional approximately 7 days and then scanned a final time.
- DRUG
-
comparator taken for approximately 10 days
- DRUG
-
Methylphenidate
Control Arm: Baseline visit with 2 fMRI scans pre- and post-20mg methylphenidate, 4 acute drug administration (6-14 days in randomized order: 1. Placebo + placebo; 2. 20mg suvorexant + Placebo; 3. Placebo + 40mg methylphenidate; 4. 20 mg suvorexant + 40mg methylphenidate max)
Sponsors & Collaborators
-
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
lead NIH
Principal Investigators
-
Amy C Janes, Ph.D. · National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
Study Design
- Allocation
- RANDOMIZED
- Purpose
- BASIC_SCIENCE
- Masking
- DOUBLE
- Model
- CROSSOVER
Eligibility
- Min Age
- 18 Years
- Max Age
- 60 Years
- Sex
- ALL
- Healthy Volunteers
- Yes
Timeline & Regulatory
- Start
- 2023-02-15
- Primary Completion
- 2027-12-31
- Completion
- 2027-12-31
Countries
- United States
Study Locations
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