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. 2022 Oct 1:239:109606.
doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2022.109606. Epub 2022 Aug 20.

Efficacy of ketamine intervention to decrease alcohol use, cravings, and withdrawal symptoms in adults with problematic alcohol use or alcohol use disorder: A systematic review and comprehensive analysis of mechanism of actions

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Efficacy of ketamine intervention to decrease alcohol use, cravings, and withdrawal symptoms in adults with problematic alcohol use or alcohol use disorder: A systematic review and comprehensive analysis of mechanism of actions

Nicolas Garel et al. Drug Alcohol Depend. .

Abstract

Background: Alcohol use disorder is highly prevalent and has important economical, societal, psychiatric, and medical consequences. All currently approved therapeutic approaches targeting alcohol dependence have relatively modest effects and high relapse rates. Recent evidence suggests that ketamine may be an effective intervention to treat alcohol use disorder and alcoholic withdrawal. This systematic review aimed to assess the current level of evidence for this intervention.

Methods: This systematic review was carried out following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines and was registered on the international database of systematic reviews PROSPERO. Medline(Ovid), CINAHL Complete(EBSCOhost), PsycINFO(Ovid), EBM Reviews(Ovid), EMBASE(Ovid), and Google Scholar were searched for studies using ketamine to treat harmful alcohol use, craving, or withdrawal states in humans. Studies of any methodology that evaluated ketamine in isolation or combination with other interventions were included. The risk of bias was assessed using specific Cochrane critical appraisal tools.

Results: Of 1922 abstracts identified, 8 full-text articles were eligible for inclusion, yielding a total sample size of 634 participants. Five studies investigated the impact of ketamine on alcohol use and/or cravings and/or withdrawal in outpatient settings. Three studies looked at the effect of adding ketamine to conventional treatment of withdrawal symptoms in participants admitted to intensive care unit for severe alcohol withdrawal. Results on primary outcomes were mixed within and across trials.

Conclusions: Despite promising results, the current evidence does not permit definitive conclusions about the efficacy of ketamine in alcohol use disorders or withdrawal. Future studies are warranted.

Keywords: Alcohol use; Craving; Intervention; Ketamine; Systematic review; Withdrawal.

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Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of interest DJA receives study materials from Cardiol Therapeutics for a clinical trial funded by the Quebec Ministry of Health and Social Services which is not related to the topic of the present manuscript.

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