Narcolepsy drug being used to improve cognitive performance affects brain dopamine activity, suggesting potential for abuse and dependence
Preliminary research in healthy men suggests that the
narcolepsy drug modafinil, increasingly being used to enhance cognitive abilities,
affects the activity of dopamine in the brain in a way that may create the potential
for abuse and dependence, according to a study in the March 18 issue of JAMA.
Modafinil, a wake-promoting drug used in the treatment
of sleep disorders, may enhance cognition and is used off-label for the treatment
of cognitive dysfunction in some psychiatric disorders (i.e., schizophrenia, attention-deficit/hyperactivity
disorder [ADHD]). The Physicians' Desk Reference cautions that it can produce
psychoactive and euphoric effects typical of central nervous system stimulant
drugs, and there is debate surrounding its potential for abuse, according to background
information in the article. The mechanisms of action of modafinil are not well
understood but are believed to differ from those of stimulant medications (such
as methylphenidate and amphetamine), which increase dopamine in the brain by targeting
the dopamine transporters, a mechanism that underlies the abuse potential of these
drugs. However, there is growing evidence that dopamine may also play a role in
the mode of action of modafinil.
Nora D. Volkow, M.D., of the National Institute on Alcohol
Abuse and Alcoholism, Bethesda, Md., and colleagues at Brookhaven National Laboratory
conducted a study to test whether modafinil, at therapeutic doses, would elevate
extracellular dopamine in the brain by blocking the dopamine transporter. The
study included 10 healthy men, between the ages of 23-46 years, who received either
placebo or modafinil: 200 mg, the dose recommended for narcolepsy; or 400 mg,
a dose shown to be beneficial for the treatment of ADHD. The effects of modafinil
on extracellular dopamine and on dopamine transporters were measured by positron
emission tomography.
The researchers found: "In this pilot study, modafinil
acutely increased dopamine levels and blocked dopamine transporters in the human
brain. Because drugs that increase dopamine have the potential for abuse, and
considering the increasing use of modafinil for multiple purposes, these results
suggest that risk for addiction in vulnerable persons merits heightened awareness."
Modafinil also increased dopamine in the nucleus accumbens,
a brain region critical for the rewarding effects of drugs of abuse.
"Modafinil was developed with an expectation that a medication
could have a non-dopaminergic target for its wake-promoting effects. However,
the current findings in humans, along with preclinical studies, documenting the
indispensable role of dopamine in the wake-promoting effects of modafinil, support
modafinil's dopamine-enhancing effects as a mechanism for its therapeutic actions."
|