Randomized controlled trial in alcohol relapse prevention: Role of atenolol, alcohol craving, and treatment adherence

1994 
Abstract Previous studies suggest that beta-adrenergic blockers reduce craving levels during acute alcohol withdrawal. We conducted a new study to assess whether the daily use of atenolol by the abstinent alcoholic could maintain a blunted craving for alcohol and result in a decreased rate of relapse for alcohol abuse. The study was designed as a randomized, controlled, double-blind clinical trial. Among all 100 patients (50 atenolol, 50 placebo), only 15 stayed in the trial and remained fully abstinent for 1 year (7 atenolol, 8 placebo). Of the remaining 85 patients, 30 withdrew early while still abstinent (17 atenolol, 13 placebo). In the 57 high-risk patients who reported craving for alcohol at baseline, the treatment failure rates were 90% for patients receiving placebo, and was reduced to 65% in those who received atenolol (risk reduction=28%, 95% confidence interval, -3% to 49%). The data from this trial also support the observation that poorer levels of treatment adherence are strongly associated with adverse outcomes for alcoholics during follow-up. This relationship was present both for patients who received atenolol and for those who received placebo.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    14
    References
    29
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []