Erica N. Grodin

Clinical Neuroscientist

Ibudilast attenuates alcohol cue-elicited frontostriatal functional connectivity in alcohol use disorder.


Journal article


E. Burnette, L. Ray, M. Irwin, E. Grodin
Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research, 2021

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMed
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APA   Click to copy
Burnette, E., Ray, L., Irwin, M., & Grodin, E. (2021). Ibudilast attenuates alcohol cue-elicited frontostriatal functional connectivity in alcohol use disorder. Alcoholism, Clinical and Experimental Research.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Burnette, E., L. Ray, M. Irwin, and E. Grodin. “Ibudilast Attenuates Alcohol Cue-Elicited Frontostriatal Functional Connectivity in Alcohol Use Disorder.” Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research (2021).


MLA   Click to copy
Burnette, E., et al. “Ibudilast Attenuates Alcohol Cue-Elicited Frontostriatal Functional Connectivity in Alcohol Use Disorder.” Alcoholism, Clinical and Experimental Research, 2021.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{e2021a,
  title = {Ibudilast attenuates alcohol cue-elicited frontostriatal functional connectivity in alcohol use disorder.},
  year = {2021},
  journal = {Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research},
  author = {Burnette, E. and Ray, L. and Irwin, M. and Grodin, E.}
}

Abstract

BACKGROUND Ibudilast, a novel neuroimmune modulator being studied to treat alcohol use disorder (AUD), was shown in a randomized controlled trial (NCT03489850) to reduce ventral striatum (VS) activation in response to visual alcohol cues. The present study extended this finding by probing the effects of ibudilast on alcohol cue-elicited functional connectivity (i.e., temporally correlated activation) with the VS seed. The study also tests the association between functional connectivity and alcohol use during the trial.

METHODS Non-treatment-seeking participants (n = 45) with current alcohol use disorder were randomized to receive twice-daily dosing with either ibudilast (50 mg; n = 20) or placebo (n = 25). Upon reaching the target dosagee of the medication or placebo, participants completed a functional neuroimaging alcohol cue reactivity paradigm. Drinks per drinking day were assessed at baseline and daily during the 2-week trial.

RESULTS Ibudilast reduced alcohol cue-elicited functional connectivity between the VS seed and reward-processing regions including the orbitofrontal and anterior cingulate cortices compared with placebo (p < 0.05). Cue-elicited functional connectivity was correlated with drinks per drinking day (R2  = 0.5351, p < 0.001), and ibudilast reduced this association in similar reward-processing regions compared with placebo.

CONCLUSIONS Ibudilast's effects on drinking outcomes may be related to the attenuation of functional connectivity in frontostriatal circuits related to reward processing. These results provide an important proof of concept for this novel pharmacotherapy and support the clinical utility of incorporating neuroimaging-and especially functional connectivity-analyses into medication development.