Objective: Gabapentin is commonly used off-label in the treatment of psychiatric disorders with success, failure, and controversy. A systematic review of the literature was performed to elucidate the evidence for clinical benefit of gabapentin in psychiatric disorders.
Data sources: Bibliographic reference searches for gabapentin use in psychiatric disorders were performed in PubMed and Ovid MEDLINE search engines with no language restrictions from January 1, 1983, to October 1, 2014, excluding nonhuman studies. For psychiatric references, the keywords bipolar, depression, anxiety, mood, posttraumatic stress disorder (posttraumatic stress disorder and PTSD), obsessive-compulsive disorder (obsessive-compulsive disorder and OCD), alcohol (abuse, dependence, withdraw), drug (abuse, dependence, withdraw), opioid (abuse, dependence, withdraw), cocaine (abuse, dependence, withdraw), and amphetamine (abuse, dependence, withdraw) were crossed with gabapentin OR neurontin.
Study selection and data extraction: The resulting 988 abstracts were read by 2 reviewers; references were excluded if gabapentin was not a study compound or psychiatric symptoms were not studied. The resulting references were subsequently read, reviewed, and analyzed; 219 pertinent to gabapentin use in psychiatric disorders were retained. Only 34 clinical trials investigating psychiatric disorders contained quality of evidence level II-2 or higher.
Results: Gabapentin may have benefit for some anxiety disorders, although there are no studies for generalized anxiety disorder. Gabapentin has less likely benefit adjunctively for bipolar disorder. Gabapentin has clearer efficacy for alcohol craving and withdrawal symptoms and may have a role in adjunctive treatment of opioid dependence. There is no clear evidence for gabapentin therapy in depression, PTSD prevention, OCD, or other types of substance abuse. Limitations of available data include variation in dosing between studies, gabapentin as monotherapy or adjunctive treatment, and differing primary outcomes between trials.
Conclusions: Further research is required to better clarify the benefit of gabapentin in psychiatric disorders.
Gabapentin Therapy in Psychiatric Disorders:
A Systematic Review
ABSTRACT
Objective: Gabapentin is commonly used off-label in the treatment of psychiatric disorders with success, failure, and controversy. A systematic review of the literature was performed to elucidate the evidence for clinical benefit of gabapentin in psychiatric disorders.
Data sources: Bibliographic reference searches for gabapentin use in psychiatric disorders were performed in PubMed and Ovid MEDLINE search engines with no language restrictions from January 1, 1983, to October 1, 2014, excluding nonhuman studies. For psychiatric references, the keywords bipolar, depression, anxiety, mood, posttraumatic stress disorder (posttraumatic stress disorder and PTSD), obsessive-compulsive disorder (obsessive-compulsive disorder and OCD), alcohol (abuse, dependence, withdraw), drug (abuse, dependence, withdraw), opioid (abuse, dependence, withdraw), cocaine (abuse, dependence, withdraw), and amphetamine (abuse, dependence, withdraw) were crossed with gabapentin OR neurontin.
Study selection and data extraction: The resulting 988 abstracts were read by 2 reviewers; references were excluded if gabapentin was not a study compound or psychiatric symptoms were not studied. The resulting references were subsequently read, reviewed, and analyzed; 219 pertinent to gabapentin use in psychiatric disorders were retained. Only 34 clinical trials investigating psychiatric disorders contained quality of evidence level II-2 or higher.
Results: Gabapentin may have benefit for some anxiety disorders, although there are no studies for generalized anxiety disorder. Gabapentin has less likely benefit adjunctively for bipolar disorder. Gabapentin has clearer efficacy for alcohol craving and withdrawal symptoms and may have a role in adjunctive treatment of opioid dependence. There is no clear evidence for gabapentin therapy in depression, PTSD prevention, OCD, or other types of substance abuse. Limitations of available data include variation in dosing between studies, gabapentin as monotherapy or adjunctive treatment, and differing primary outcomes between trials.
Conclusions: Further research is required to better clarify the benefit of gabapentin in psychiatric disorders.
Prim Care Companion CNS Disord
2015;17(5):doi:10.4088/PCC.15r01821
© Copyright 2015 Physicians Postgraduate Press, Inc.
aDepartment of Psychiatry, Cambridge Health Alliance, Cambridge, Massachusetts
bDepartment of Neurology, Tufts University School of Medicine, Tufts Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts
cDepartment of Neurology, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston University Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts
*Corresponding author: Michael D. Perloff, MD, PhD, Department of Neurology, Boston University School of Medicine, 72 E. Concord St, C3, Boston, MA 02118 ([email protected]).
Gabapentin was originally approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the treatment of partial seizures in 1993,1,2 with subsequent approval for postherpetic neuralgia in 2002.3–5 Within a decade of initial FDA approval, gabapentin’s second most common use became off-label prescription for psychiatric disorders.6 Gabapentin’s use in psychiatric disorders has been shrouded in controversy, from the 1996 lawsuit against Warner-Lambert for promoting Neurontin for off-label indications, including psychiatric disorders,7,8 to more recent criticism of a number of industry-sponsored trials due to selective reporting and positive publication bias.9
Gabapentin was developed to create a γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) neurotransmitter analog.2 However, it exerts no GABA agonist effects and does not inhibit GABA uptake or degradation.10–13 The most accepted molecular mechanism of gabapentin is binding at the α2δ1 subunit of Ca2+ channels affecting Ca2+ currents.14–16 The ubiquity of α2δ1 Ca2+ channels in the brain and spinal cord most likely explain the benefit of gabapentin in seizures, pain, and multiple disorders.16
Gabapentin has a limited, generally well-tolerated side effect profile, and since it is not hepatically metabolized, has minimal drug-drug interactions. With safety, efficacy, and a proposed mechanism well-established for treating neuropathic pain and seizure,2–5,10–13,16 numerous case reports and reviews suggest gabapentin’s potential efficacy as either monotherapy or adjunctive therapy in the treatment of bipolar disorder, depression, anxiety disorders, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), alcohol dependence, and other types of drug abuse. The purpose of this review is to evaluate gabapentin use for psychiatric disorders with particular attention paid to randomized controlled trials.
METHOD
An initial bibliographic reference search for gabapentin use in psychiatric disorders was performed in PubMed and Ovid MEDLINE from January 1, 1983 (gabapentin’s appearance in medical research literature), to October 1, 2014 with no language restrictions. For psychiatric references, keywords bipolar, depression, anxiety, mood, posttraumatic stress disorder (posttraumatic stress disorder and PTSD), obsessive-compulsive disorder (obsessive-compulsive disorder and OCD), alcohol (abuse, dependence, withdraw), drug (abuse, dependence, withdraw), opioid (abuse, dependence, withdraw), cocaine (abuse, dependence, withdraw), and amphetamine (abuse, dependence, withdraw) were then crossed with gabapentin OR neurontin. Nonhuman studies were excluded.
The reference abstracts were read by 2 reviewers (M.D.P. and P.M.B. or M.D.P. and R.K.B.), and, based on the abstract, references were excluded if gabapentin was not a study compound or psychiatric symptoms were not studied. Nonblinded studies or case reports that did not describe a unique finding were eliminated. The resulting references were subsequently reviewed, analyzed, and discussed with special attention to clinical trials with quality of evidence level II-2 or higher.17,18
Initial keyword search for gabapentin use in psychiatric references resulted in 1,370 references. Eliminating nonhuman studies and based on the inclusion criteria, 219 articles pertinent to gabapentin use in the treatment of psychiatric disorders were extracted (Figure 1). Thirty-four clinical trials were quality of evidence level II-2 or higher (Table 1).
RESULTS
Bipolar Disorder
The randomized controlled trials19–21 investigating gabapentin for treating bipolar disorder indicate it is likely to be ineffective. Data interpretation is difficult: dosing varies by trial, gabapentin is used as both monotherapy and adjunctive therapy, patients have heterogeneous diagnoses, and primary outcomes differ between studies. Pande et al19 published the largest randomized controlled trial to date (N = 114) in which subjects were randomized to treatment with standard mood stabilizers or with adjunctive gabapentin. After receiving gabapentin 600–3,600 mg/d for 10 weeks, mood scale scores were no different between treatment groups.19 In a double-blind, randomized, crossover series (N = 31),20 patients with refractory bipolar and unipolar mood disorder received three 6-week monotherapy treatments of lamotrigine, gabapentin, or placebo. On the basis of the Clinical Global Impressions Scale for Bipolar Illness (CGI-BP), lamotrigine was superior in reducing symptoms versus gabapentin and placebo.20 Obrocea et al21 also found gabapentin and placebo inferior to lamotrigine in a crossover study of 35 patients with bipolar disorder and 10 patients with unipolar disorder for reducing depressive symptoms.
An abundance of open-label trials and case series exist on gabapentin’s use in bipolar disorder. While these data are less rigorous, they may be helpful with individual patient treatment (specific case comparison to similar specific clinical parameters), and review is warranted. Several case series22–25 on adjunctive gabapentin therapy in bipolar disorder suggest it may be effective. A case-control study22 of 60 patients in the acute phase of mania found that treatment with lithium and adjunctive gabapentin 900 mg significantly reduced symptoms. In 1 study,23 21 mixed-state patients refractory to mood stabilizers received concurrent gabapentin (300–2,000 mg/d) for 8 weeks. Ten patients showed significant improvement in CGI-BP scores, particularly with depressive symptoms.23 Erfurth et al24 published a case series on 14 patients with acute mania treated with gabapentin 1,200–4,800 mg/d. Six patients received gabapentin and valproic acid or lithium and 8 received gabapentin plus a benzodiazepine for sedation. On the basis of a mania assessment scale after 21 days, gabapentin appeared safe and efficacious, although 4 patients withdrew due to inadequate symptom management.24 Finally, in a case series of manic elderly patients (n = 7),25 gabapentin 900–1,200 mg/d with low-dose antipsychotics or valproate successfully resolved mania in 6 patients.
Additional studies address gabapentin as monotherapy or adjunctive therapy for acute mania in patients refractory to standard therapy and show equivocal results. A meta-analysis26 of 68 randomized controlled trials comparing the efficacy of antimanic drugs found gabapentin to be no more effective than placebo. In contrast, several case series and open-label trials suggest gabapentin efficacy for acute mania. Knoll et al27 examined 12 bipolar manic/hypomanic patients refractory to or intolerant of mood stabilizers and treated with gabapentin for 3–60 weeks with 900–3,300 mg/d. Half of the patients discontinued gabapentin due to side effects and half showed moderate improvement.27 Additional smaller studies28,29 showed manic/hypomanic patients experiencing a significant response to gabapentin. Some open-label studies30,31 of adjunctive gabapentin in bipolar mania have shown mixed benefit but suggest positive efficacy.
Investigating prophylaxis in euthymic bipolar patients, Vieta et al32 conducted a randomized, placebo-controlled trial to assess adjunctive gabapentin’s effect in treating and preventing bipolar symptoms. For 1 year, 13 patients received adjunctive gabapentin with standard mood stabilizers and 12 patients received adjunctive placebo. On the basis of the CGI-BP, gabapentin-treated patients showed significant improvement from baseline to month 12. However, other clinical measures assessing mania, depression, and sleep revealed no differences between treatment groups. Aside from small sample size, groups differed by baseline depressive episodes (19.3 and 8.3 mean episodes in gabapentin and placebo, respectively).32
In addition to alleged improvement in mania-associated symptoms, several reports33–37 suggest that gabapentin ameliorates other psychiatric symptoms as well. In an open-label trial (n = 22), Wang et al33 reported success in treating mild to moderate bipolar depression with adjunctive gabapentin (mean dose of 1,725 mg/d) for 12 weeks. In another study of 16 bipolar I and II patients receiving adjunctive gabapentin (mean dose of 1,310 mg/d), 8 showed improved depression, anxiety, and irritability symptoms at 12-week follow-up.34 Sokolski et al35 noted in an open-label add-on trial (n = 10) that gabapentin was effective, with improvement in depressive symptoms, mania ratings, and sleep disturbance persisting for 1 month posttreatment. Ghaemi et al36 retrospectively reviewed charts of 50 bipolar and unipolar mood spectrum disorder patients receiving adjuvant or monotherapy gabapentin. On the basis of the CGI-BP, 30% of patients showed significant improvement in mood.36 In a similar report, Ghaemi and Goodwin37 reviewed the charts of 21 patients with mood disorders treated with gabapentin (mean dose of 943 mg/d) either as monotherapy or adjunctive therapy for 2–52 weeks (mean of 17 weeks). On the basis of self-report mood scales, manic symptoms improved by 43.8% and depression scores by 27.6%. In the depressed subgroup of 10 patients, symptoms improved by 57.5%.37
Pharmaceutical marketing has greatly influenced gabapentin’s off-label use for bipolar disorder,38 and several uncontrolled case series22–25 using gabapentin in bipolar patients have contributed to the rise in off-label gabapentin prescriptions. A large number of peer-reviewed but noncomparative studies and reviews23–25,27–31,33–37,39,40 also support gabapentin’s role either as monotherapy after first-line treatment failure or as adjunctive therapy to mood stabilizers, antidepressants, or neuroleptics. Literature reviews41–48 referencing the off-label use of gabapentin in bipolar disorder reinforce the apparent efficacy of gabapentin for mood stabilization or augmentation. Despite arguments based on biological plausibility of gabapentin in treating mood disorders and disproportionate attention to less rigorous studies with positive findings, 4 randomized controlled trials have failed to support the claims.19–21,32
Depressive Disorders
To date, no controlled trials exist that investigate gabapentin’s effect in the treatment of major depression as monotherapy or adjunctive treatment, and according to several case reports and chart reviews,49–51 gabapentin use for depression is equivocal. In a chart review49 of 27 patients with depression refractory to standard antidepressant therapy, 10 patients responded to adjunctive gabapentin treatment (mean dose of 904 mg/d for 15 weeks). Maurer et al50 published a single case report of a 48-year-old woman with recurrent depression, somatization, and pain who responded to gabapentin 1,800 mg/d with improvement in both pain and depressive symptoms. Another narrative review51 regarding anticonvulsants in depression treatment concluded that there is insufficient evidence to support gabapentin’s use in depression.
Epilepsy patients are at increased risk for depression, most likely due to both psychosocial and neurologic factors.52 Harden et al53 randomized 40 epilepsy patients to receive adjunctive gabapentin or standard antiepileptic therapy. After 3 months of gabapentin treatment (mean dose of 1,615 mg/d), patients noted superior mood improvement compared to controls based on the Cornell Dysthymia Rating Scale. Groups were similar based on other mood scales, including the Hamilton Depression and Anxiety Rating Scales and the Beck Depression Inventory.53
Anxiety Disorders
Some evidence suggests that gabapentin possesses anxiolytic properties, though few data exist for patients with generalized anxiety disorder (GAD). Gabapentin has been examined as therapy for treating social phobia, panic and somatoform disorders, anxiety in breast cancer survivors, and surgery-associated anxiety with mixed results.
In a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study, Pande et al54 randomized 69 patients with social phobia to receive gabapentin 900–3,600 mg/d or placebo for 14 weeks. Gabapentin was superior to placebo in treatment of symptoms associated with social phobia according to both patient- and clinician-rated scales.54 Another controlled trial55 of 103 patients with panic disorder found that based on Panic and Agoraphobia Scale scores, gabapentin 600–3,600 mg/d and placebo groups were similar. However, in a subset of patients with a Panic and Agoraphobia Scale score > 20, gabapentin was more effective than placebo in attenuating symptoms.55 A randomized, controlled, double-blind clinical trial56 found gabapentin 300 mg/d or 900 mg/d superior to placebo in reducing hot flashes and anxiety in breast cancer patients who had completed chemotherapy cycles.
Several studies report gabapentin as effective in reducing perisurgical anxiety in otherwise psychologically healthy patients. In 210 patients randomized to receive gabapentin 1,200 mg, hydroxyzine 75 mg, or placebo preoperatively, Tirault et al57 showed that gabapentin was superior to hydroxyzine or placebo in reducing anxiety. A randomized controlled trial58 of 130 patients undergoing cataract surgery found a single dose of gabapentin 600 mg to significantly decrease perioperative anxiety compared to placebo. However, there was no significant difference when gabapentin was compared to melatonin.58 Two additional randomized controlled studies59,60 found premedication with gabapentin to be effective in reducing presurgical anxiety. However, in a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial, Clarke et al61 reported no difference in pre- and post-medication anxiety between gabapentin (600 mg, n = 22) and placebo (n = 48) groups 2 hours postoperative.
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
The available data suggest that gabapentin is a potentially effective adjuvant agent in the treatment of PTSD. In a retrospective study (n = 30),62 the majority of PTSD patients (77%) treated with adjunctive gabapentin (300–3,600 mg/d) demonstrated moderate improvement in sleep duration and a decrease in nightmares. Case reports63–65 suggest that gabapentin plus antidepressant therapy is useful in treating PTSD symptoms such as nightmares, flashbacks, anxiety, and fear. However, monotherapy gabapentin appears ineffective for prevention of PTSD. In patients admitted for surgical trauma, Stein et al66 examined gabapentin use in prevention of PTSD and depressive symptoms. Within 48 hours of the traumatic event, 48 patients were randomized to propranolol (60–120 mg/d), gabapentin (900–1,200 mg/d), or placebo for 14 days. Both treatments were similar to placebo in controlling depressive and PTSD-type symptoms.66 In a retrospective study, Fowler et al67 examined the effect of gabapentin and pregabalin on the development of PTSD in burned service members. In the study, 290 service members received gabapentin, pregabalin, or neither. There was no difference in incidence of PTSD between the groups.67
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Only 1 study has evaluated gabapentin use for obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Onder et al68 studied fluoxetine monotherapy versus fluoxetine with adjunctive gabapentin in controlling OCD symptoms. Forty patients were randomized (open-label) to fluoxetine 20 mg/d or fluoxetine 20 mg/d with gabapentin 600 mg/d. If patients were nonresponsive to either regimen at week 4, fluoxetine doses were increased to 40 or 60 mg/d and gabapentin to 900 mg/d. The gabapentin adjunctive treatment group showed significant reduction in OCD symptoms at 2 weeks, but the effect failed to persist past week 4. The authors speculate that gabapentin may accelerate fluoxetine’s potency in reducing OCD-type behaviors.68
Alcohol Dependence and Withdrawal
Gabapentin efficacy in alcohol dependence, abstinence, and acute alcohol withdrawal is suggested in studies by Anton et al.69,70 In 1 study,70 150 alcohol-dependent patients were randomized to placebo, naltrexone 50 mg/d for 16 weeks, or a protocol of naltrexone 50 mg/d for 16 weeks with gabapentin 1,200 mg/d added for the first 6 weeks. The 6-week combination of gabapentin and naltrexone showed improvement of interval to heavy drinking (~20% less than patients not taking gabapentin) and number of drinking days (~50% and ~70% less, respectively) compared to placebo or naltrexone alone.70 While results were significant and promising, the first author had financial support from multiple pharmaceutical companies. Another study69 randomized 60 alcohol-dependent patients to placebo or a protocol of flumazenil 2 mg/d for 2 days and gabapentin 1,200 mg/d for 39 days. For patients with severe withdrawal symptoms, those who received the protocol (n = 7) spent more days abstinent compared to the placebo group (n = 9). No differences were observed between treatment and placebo groups in patients with mild or moderate withdrawal symptoms.69
In an open-label trial,71 patients with acute alcohol withdrawal (n = 37) received gabapentin 800 mg. Within 2 hours, 27 patients showed significant decrease on the Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment (CIWA). These early responders received gabapentin 2,400 mg/d for the next 2 days, during which 3 early responders worsened and 2 experienced withdrawal seizures. The 10 gabapentin nonresponders received standard therapy with benzodiazepine or clomethiazole. Similar CIWA scores were noted between the early responders versus nonresponders, suggesting that patients with moderate and mild withdrawal might benefit from gabapentin therapy.71 In another study,72 gabapentin was comparable to phenobarbital in treating acute alcohol withdrawal symptoms in 27 acutely withdrawing patients, with no outcome scores differing between the 2 drugs.
Myrick et al73 studied gabapentin versus lorazepam for treatment of acute alcohol withdrawal. They found that gabapentin 1,200 mg/d was superior to both gabapentin 900 mg/d and lorazepam 6 mg/d in decreasing alcohol withdrawal symptoms and lowering odds of drinking during and after treatment. Gabapentin patients reported less anxiety, less sedation, and decreased alcohol craving compared to the lorazepam group.73 In a small double-blind, randomized study of 26 veterans with alcohol dependence undergoing outpatient alcohol detoxification, Stock et al74 showed that gabapentin treatment reduced sedation and may decrease alcohol craving compared to chlordiazepoxide. No difference between CIWA-revised scores was found between treatment groups.74 In contrast, when Bonnet et al75 treated withdrawing patients (n = 46) with gabapentin 1,600 mg/d or placebo for 7 days, no difference in withdrawal symptoms or mood were noted. In a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial (n = 61) comparing gabapentin 1,600 mg/d versus clomethiazole and placebo,76 add-on gabapentin treatment was no more effective than placebo in reducing clomethiazole dosing or alleviating withdrawal symptoms.
While abuse of gabapentin itself (mixed with other agents) needs to be considered,77 gabapentin appears to be safe and well tolerated in individuals with alcohol dependence.78–83 Furieri et al84 assessed 60 Brazilian men with alcohol dependence after treatment for acute withdrawal and randomized them to either gabapentin 600 mg/d or placebo for 7 days. Gabapentin was more effective in reducing drinks per day, average percent of heavy drinking days, and increased number of days abstinent, while decreasing alcohol cravings.84 Mason et al85 randomized 33 untreated alcohol-dependent patients to 1,200 mg/d gabapentin or placebo for 1 week. Their results suggested that gabapentin was effective in attenuating subjective alcohol craving and craving associated with emotionally evocative stimuli compared to placebo.85 Most recently, Mason et al86 found that gabapentin, particularly at a dose of 1,800 mg/d, significantly improved rates of abstinence and no heavy drinking in a 12-week, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of 150 participants with current alcohol dependence in the outpatient setting. In addition, a similar dose effect was seen in mood, insomnia, and craving.86
Drug Abuse, Dependence, and Withdrawal
Several placebo-controlled trials show that gabapentin is inappropriate therapy in preventing cocaine relapse. In a double-blind, randomized trial,87 patients with cocaine dependence (n = 99) were randomized to receive 3,200 mg/d of gabapentin or placebo, in addition to individual relapse prevention therapy. Primary outcome measures were days of cocaine use, self-reported cocaine craving, and treatment retention. There were no differences in treatment groups.87 Another double-blind, placebo-controlled trial88 involving methadone-treated cocaine-dependent patients affirmed no gabapentin benefit for cocaine abstinence. Mancino et al89 conducted an additional randomized controlled trial comparing sertraline alone to sertraline with gabapentin to treat cocaine-dependent patients with depressive symptoms. Sertraline alone showed a significantly lower percentage of cocaine-positive urine samples when compared to placebo, but gabapentin did not augment this effect.89 In a 48-day, double-blind crossover study (n = 7), Hart et al90 examined the effect of gabapentin maintenance (0, 600 mg/d, and 1,200 mg/d) on cocaine self-administration, cardiovascular, and subjective outcomes. Results showed that some cocaine-related subjective ratings were significantly decreased when participants were taking gabapentin. However, there was no effect on cocaine self-administration or cardiovascular effects.90 Berger et al91 found similar results but did not conduct a nonblinded study. A follow-up double-blind, crossover study by Hart and colleagues92 (n = 6) with a higher dose of gabapentin (0, 2,400 mg/d, and 3,200 mg/d) found that gabapentin did not decrease cocaine self-administration, cardiovascular effects, or subjective effects of cocaine. Despite benefit previously demonstrated in open-label non–placebo-controlled trials,93,94 the previously mentioned more rigorous placebo-controlled studies show that gabapentin is inappropriate pharmacotherapy in cocaine relapse prevention.
For treating methamphetamine dependence, gabapentin does not appear effective. In a 16-week randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial (n = 88),95 patients with methamphetamine dependence were randomized to receive gabapentin 2,400 mg/d, baclofen 60 mg/d, or placebo for 4 months in addition to psychosocial counseling. On the basis of urine samples, the authors concluded that gabapentin was no more effective than placebo in reducing methamphetamine use.95 In a 1-month trial, Urschel et al96 showed that flumazenil and gabapentin were superior to placebo in decreasing methamphetamine craving and use. However, in a double-blind, placebo-controlled evaluation of the PROMETA protocol consisting of flumazenil, gabapentin, and hydroxyzine, Ling et al97 found the protocol to be no more effective than placebo in reducing methamphetamine use.
Although initial case reports and uncontrolled studies98,99 suggested a role for gabapentin in treating opioid dependence, cravings, and withdrawal symptoms, a randomized controlled trial contradicts such claims. Kheirabadi et al100 randomized 40 opiate-dependent patients to methadone-assisted detoxification with adjunctive gabapentin 900 mg/d or placebo. Gabapentin was no more effective than placebo in controlling opiate withdrawal symptoms. A 3-week, open-label study101 followed up the study by Kheirabadi et al100 to assess the use of adjunctive treatment with gabapentin 1,600 mg/d in 27 patients undergoing methadone-assisted detoxification. Compared to previous trials, there was no significant difference between groups treated with gabapentin 1,600 mg and 900 mg. Gabapentin 1,600 mg, however, was significantly superior in decreasing some symptoms of withdrawal.101Another randomized, placebo-controlled study (n = 60) by Moghadam and Alavinia102 found gabapentin to be an effective add-on therapy when added to methadone for acute detoxification of opioids, resulting in reduced methadone daily and cumulative doses and improved withdrawal symptoms. A small, randomized, placebo-controlled pilot trial of gabapentin use during buprenorphine-assisted detoxification procedure by Sanders et al103 found a significantly decreased probability of opioid-positive urine over time in patients treated with gabapentin versus placebo.
CONCLUSION
Since its clinical introduction in the early 1990s, gabapentin has been employed in a multitude of clinical disorders with increasing use in psychiatric disorders. Pharmaceutical companies with obvious financial interest have pushed gabapentin’s off-label use and crossed lines of ethics in publication results, culminating in the sentinel article by Vedula et al9 in 2009 criticizing industry-sponsored off-label gabapentin trials. In addition, interpretation of the current evidence is also complicated by the challenges of the variable dosing of gabapentin between trials, the heterogeneity of diagnoses, evaluating efficacy as monotherapy or adjunctive therapy, and differing primary outcomes.
Overall, gabapentin’s positive outcomes in off-label psychiatric use have been presented in a multitude of case series and open-label studies. However, these studies are biased toward positive results and are poorly controlled. Case series suggest benefit of adjunctive gabapentin for mood symptoms in bipolar disorder, though the existing randomized controlled trials do not support this finding. Gabapentin’s role in acute mania is equivocal, and limited data exist on its use as prophylaxis in bipolar disorder. One can argue the difficulty in trial design for bipolar disorder based on patient and treatment variability, but this is true for any bipolar disorder clinical therapeutic trial (and drugs have shown efficacy in double-blind, placebo-controlled trials).
Gabapentin does appear to provide benefit for some anxiety disorders, although randomized controlled trials have been limited to social phobia, anxiety in breast cancer, and perioperative anxiety. To date, no studies exist for gabapentin efficacy in generalized anxiety disorder. There is limited evidence to suggest the use of gabapentin in depression, PTSD, and OCD.
Multiple studies suggest gabapentin has some efficacy in alcohol dependence, withdrawal, and craving. Often examined as an alternative to benzodiazepines, gabapentin is not hepatically metabolized and thus may be preferred for patients with alcohol-associated liver disease or those who are taking other prescription or illicit drugs. Gabapentin appears to have potential in supporting abstinence. Its role as an alternative to benzodiazepines in acute alcohol withdrawal still requires more study.
As for gabapentin’s use in other types of substance dependence, there are no data to support its efficacy in cocaine or methamphetamine dependence. The clinical trials on the adjunctive use of gabapentin in opioid dependence have had equivocal results, but higher doses of gabapentin may be promising when coadministered with opioid replacement therapies. Further evaluation of gabapentin therapy in substance dependence should also account for more recent concerns over abuse of gabapentin itself, in the context of polysubstance abuse, and reports of withdrawal symptoms with abrupt cessation of gabapentin treatment.
Given its safety profile and generally well-tolerated side effects, further evidence-based research is needed to support expansion of gabapentin’s off-label use in psychiatric disorders. Future study should focus on elucidating gabapentin’s anxiolytic effects, as well as what true benefit it may provide in bipolar disorder as adjunctive therapy for mood stabilization. To achieve these goals, more rigorous randomized controlled trials are required with special attention paid to non–industry-sponsored studies. Moreover, particular consideration should be paid to primary outcomes, without the clouding effects of secondary outcomes.
Submitted: April 7, 2015; accepted June 12, 2015.
Published online: October 22, 2015.
Drug names: buprenorphine (Subutex, Suboxone, and others), chlordiazepoxide (Librium and others), fluoxetine (Prozac and others), gabapentin (Neurontin, Gralise, and others), hydroxyzine (Visteril and others), lamotrigine (Lamictal and others), lorazepam (Ativan and others), methadone (Methadose and others), naltrexone (ReVia and others), pregabalin (Lyrica), propranolol (Inderal and others), sertraline (Zoloft and others), valproic acid (Depakene and others).
Potential conflicts of interest: None reported.
Funding/support: None reported.
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