Spironolactone in Alcohol Use Disorder (SAUD): Introduction to an ongoing double-blind, placebo-controlled, ascending dose, Phase 1b study
A. Leko, M. Farokhnia, S. T. Weiss, C. A. Blake, L. A. Farinelli, L. Leggio

TL;DR
A new study is testing spironolactone as a potential treatment for alcohol use disorder by examining its safety and effects when combined with alcohol.
Contribution
This study introduces a novel clinical trial design to evaluate spironolactone's pharmacokinetics and safety in alcohol use disorder patients.
Findings
Spironolactone reduced alcohol intake in preclinical models of binge drinking and self-administration.
Human studies showed spironolactone users decreased alcohol consumption and AUDIT-C scores in clinical settings.
The Phase 1b trial will assess spironolactone's pharmacokinetics and safety when co-administered with alcohol.
Abstract
Efforts are critically needed to increase the armamentarium of options that clinicians can use to treat patients with alcohol use disorder (AUD). Numerous preclinical studies support the hypothesis that mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) pharmacological antagonism may represent a novel and promising treatment for AUD. Namely, the non-selective MR antagonist spironolactone dose-dependently decreased 1) the intake of alcohol in mice in a model of alcohol binge drinking procedure and 2) alcohol self-administration in dependent and non-dependent rats (Farokhnia, Rentsch, Choung et al., Mol Psychiatry 2022; 27(11):4642-4652). Furthermore, two U.S.-based independent human pharmacoepidemiologic studies utilizing electronic health records data showed that patients treated with spironolactone for any indication reduced their weekly alcohol use in a primary care-type medical setting (Palzes et al.,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHeart Failure Treatment and Management
