World-first trial to investigate new medication for methamphetamine dependence
In a world-first, Australian researchers are trialling a new medication to help people who want to stop using crystal methamphetamine, or ‘ice’.
In a world-first, Australian researchers are trialling a new medication to help people who want to stop using crystal methamphetamine, or ‘ice’.
Morgaine Wallace-Steele
NDARC Communications Manager
0401 713 850
m.wallace-steele@unsw.edu.au
Led by researchers from UNSW Sydney's National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre (NDARC), the Tina Trial will investigate if the antidepressant drug mirtazapine can help people to stop using ice. Currently there are no medications available to treat methamphetamine dependence.
The Tina Trial is the largest trial of its kind ever attempted in Australia. It is being conducted at frontline clinical services in Wollongong, Geelong, Brisbane and Perth.
Funded by the Medical Research Future Fund, NDARC is leading the randomised controlled trial in collaboration with Deakin University, Monash University, the University of Wollongong, and the University of Sydney, together with health services at the four trial sites.
Lead researcher, NDARC’s Associate Professor Rebecca McKetin, says studies in the USA have found mirtazapine helps people reduce their methamphetamine use and improves their mood and sleep.
“Having a medication to help people come off methamphetamine would revolutionise treatment,” A/Prof. McKetin says.
“The Tina Trial is the first trial in the world to definitively show whether mirtazapine can be used to treat methamphetamine dependence in routine clinical practice.”
Mirtazapine (sold as Avanza) is an antidepressant drug that is already available in Australia.
Associate Professor Olivia Dean from Deakin University and Barwon Health says reusing existing medications for new applications fast tracks new treatments.
“If proven effective, it would provide a relatively cheap treatment option that could be quickly put into clinical practice,” A/Prof. Dean says.
Addiction psychiatrist and Clinical Director at Turning Point, Associate Professor Shalini Arunogiri, says that most people who seek help for methamphetamine use also have mood and sleep problems that can perpetuate the cycle of drug use.
“Having a medication that can address both substance use and these mood and sleep problems will provide a more integrated treatment approach,” A/Prof. Arunogiri says.
The lack of treatment options is a significant barrier for people who use methamphetamine.
“Having a medication would encourage a lot of people to try treatment who might otherwise go without help,” says Professor Peter Kelly from the University of Wollongong.
“The next step is to show that this medication can be used safely and effectively as a frontline treatment for people using ice in Australia.”
The research team is recruiting participants in Brisbane, Wollongong, Geelong and Perth. Recruitment information can be found online.
For more information about the Tina Trial research team please visit the NDARC website.
Participating health services: