WO2007067714A2 - Treatment of sequelae of psychiatric disorders - Google Patents

Treatment of sequelae of psychiatric disorders Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2007067714A2
WO2007067714A2 PCT/US2006/046788 US2006046788W WO2007067714A2 WO 2007067714 A2 WO2007067714 A2 WO 2007067714A2 US 2006046788 W US2006046788 W US 2006046788W WO 2007067714 A2 WO2007067714 A2 WO 2007067714A2
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Prior art keywords
sga
receptor antagonist
opioid receptor
pain
subject
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PCT/US2006/046788
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French (fr)
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WO2007067714A3 (en
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Igor Elman
David Borsook
Jan Wasley
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The Mclean Hospital Corporation
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Priority to US12/096,428 priority Critical patent/US8551986B2/en
Publication of WO2007067714A2 publication Critical patent/WO2007067714A2/en
Publication of WO2007067714A3 publication Critical patent/WO2007067714A3/en

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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61KPREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
    • A61K31/00Medicinal preparations containing organic active ingredients
    • A61K31/33Heterocyclic compounds
    • A61K31/395Heterocyclic compounds having nitrogen as a ring hetero atom, e.g. guanethidine or rifamycins
    • A61K31/435Heterocyclic compounds having nitrogen as a ring hetero atom, e.g. guanethidine or rifamycins having six-membered rings with one nitrogen as the only ring hetero atom
    • A61K31/47Quinolines; Isoquinolines
    • A61K31/485Morphinan derivatives, e.g. morphine, codeine
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61KPREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
    • A61K31/00Medicinal preparations containing organic active ingredients
    • A61K31/33Heterocyclic compounds
    • A61K31/395Heterocyclic compounds having nitrogen as a ring hetero atom, e.g. guanethidine or rifamycins
    • A61K31/495Heterocyclic compounds having nitrogen as a ring hetero atom, e.g. guanethidine or rifamycins having six-membered rings with two or more nitrogen atoms as the only ring heteroatoms, e.g. piperazine or tetrazines
    • A61K31/505Pyrimidines; Hydrogenated pyrimidines, e.g. trimethoprim
    • A61K31/519Pyrimidines; Hydrogenated pyrimidines, e.g. trimethoprim ortho- or peri-condensed with heterocyclic rings

Definitions

  • the invention relates to the field of treatment of sequelae of psychiatric disorders.
  • Metabolic Syndrome or a cluster of cardiovascular risk factors including abdominal adiposity, insulin resistance, impaired glucose tolerance,
  • SGAs second generation antipsychotic agents
  • clozapine such as clozapine, olanzapine, and to lesser degree quetiapine and risperidone, but not ziprasidone or aripiprazole
  • SGAs second generation antipsychotic agents
  • the invention features the combination of second generation antipsychotic agents (SGAs) and opioid receptor antagonists and methods of their use.
  • the invention provides a method of treating a sequela of weight gain or pain insensitivity in a subject, e.g., suffering from a psychiatric disorder, treated with a SGA by administering an opioid receptor antagonist to the subject in an amount sufficient to treat the sequela.
  • the invention provides a method of treating a psychiatric disorder by administering a SGA and an opioid receptor antagonist to a subject suffering from the psychiatric disorder in an amount sufficient to treat the psychiatric disorder, wherein the administration results in a reduction of a sequela of weight gain or pain insensitivity.
  • the invention further provides a method of treating a sequela of weight gain or pain insensitivity in a subject suffering from a psychiatric disorder by administering a SGA and an opioid receptor antagonist to the subject in an amount sufficient to treat the sequela or pain insensitivity.
  • Treatment methods may also include a diagnosis of the particular disorder or condition by a physician or other medical professional prior to administration of the therapeutic regimen to the patient for treating the particular disorder or condition. Administration of the therapeutic compounds may also occur under the continuing care of a physician or medical
  • the opioid receptor antagonist may be a ⁇ , ⁇ , or K opioid receptor antagonist or a partial agonist, e.g., butorphanol, dezocine, nalbulphine, pentazocine, or buprenorphine.
  • opioid receptor antagonists include diprenorphine, naloxone, naltrexone, ⁇ - chlornaltrexamine, WIN44,441-3, nahnefene, alvimopan (ADL 8-2698), methylnatrexone, cyprodime,
  • naltrexamine naltrexamine
  • SGAs include sulpiride, amisulpride, clozapine, olanzapine, aripirazole, ziprasidone, quetiapine, risperidone, remoxipride, zotepine, sertindole, and iloperidone.
  • Exemplary psychiatric disorders include schizophrenia, autism, psychosis, schizoaffective disorder, mood disorders, anxiety disorders, dementia, sleep disorders, eating disorders, drug or alcohol abuse and dependence, impulse control disorders, personality disorders, and neuropathic pain.
  • Sequelae of weight gain include weight gain, obesity, metabolic syndrome, insulin resistance, abdominal adiposity, impaired, glucose tolerance, dyslipidaemia, hypercholesterolemia, diabetes, and hypertension.
  • the dosage may range from 0.0001 to 1000 mg per day.
  • the opioid receptor antagonist is administered at less than 10 mg, 1 mg, 0.1 mg, 0.01 mg, or 0.001 mg per day.
  • the ratio of opioid receptor antagonist to SGA may also be at most 1 : 1,000. Other dosages are described herein.
  • the methods and combinations described herein may also be used in preventing a sequela of weight gain or pain insensitivity in a subject.
  • the invention also features a method of determining the efficacy of treatment with an SGA and an opioid receptor antagonist by determining the pain sensitivity of a subject having been administered an SGA and an opioid receptor antagonist. An increase in the level of pain sensitivity after
  • administration of the SGA and opioid receptor antagonist is indicative of therapeutic efficacy.
  • the invention further features a method for determining a propensity for a subject to gain weight from SGA treatment by determining the pain sensitivity of the subject, wherein a decreased level of pain sensitivity compared to a healthy control is indicative of the propensity for the subject to gain weight from SGA treatment. If the subject has a decreased level of pain sensitivity, this method may further include administering an SGA and an opioid receptor antagonist in an amount effective to treat a sequela of weight gain.
  • the invention provides a pharmaceutical composition including (i) a second generation antipsychotic agent (SGA) and (ii) an opioid antagonist.
  • the opioid antagonist is desirably present in an amount effective to reduce a sequela of weight gain or pain insensitivity, as described herein.
  • the invention further features a kit including (i) a second generation antipsychotic agent (SGA), (ii) an opioid antagonist, and optionally (iii) instructions for administering the SGA and opioid antagonist to treat a psychiatric disorder while reducing a sequela of weight gain or pain insensitivity.
  • the opioid receptor antagonist may be present at less than 1 mg, 0.1 mg, 0.01 mg, or 0.001 mg.
  • the ratio of opioid receptor antagonist to SGA is preferably at most 1 : 1 ,000.
  • the SGA is present in a subtherapeutically effective amount. Other dosages are described herein.
  • the subject being treated does not suffer from co-morbid substance abuse or dependence, e.g., alcohol, opioid, or cocaine.
  • an opioid antagonist other than naltrexone or naloxone is employed to treat pain insensitivity or subjects suffering from co- morbid alcohol, opioid, or cocaine abuse or dependence.
  • Combinations of two or more SGAs and/or opioid antagonists may also be employed in the methods and compositions described herein. Any of the SGAs described herein may be administered with any of the opioid receptor antagonists.
  • sequela of weight gain is meant any medical condition that results from weight gain caused by a psychiatric disorder, treatment of the disorder, or a combination thereof. Sequela of weight gain include, without limitation, weight gain, obesity, metabolic syndrome, insulin resistance, abdominal adiposity, impaired glucose tolerance, dyslipidaemia, hypercholesterolemia, diabetes, and hypertension.
  • second generation antipsychotic agent or “SGA” is meant an antipsychotic agent other than chlorpromazine, droperidol, fiuphenazine, haloperidol, loxapine, mesoridazine, molindone, perphenazine, pimozide, prochlorperazine, promazine, thioridazine, thiothixene, and trifluoperazine.
  • SGAs produce fewer extrapyrimidal side effects than first generation antipsychotic agents.
  • opioid receptor antagonist an agent that decreases opioidergic function by any mechanism.
  • preventing medical management of a patient directed to prevention of a disease, pathological condition, or disorder.
  • treating is meant the medical management of a patient with the intent that a cure or amelioration of a disease, pathological condition, or disorder will result.
  • This term includes active treatment, that is, treatment directed specifically toward improvement of a disease, pathological condition, or disorder, and also includes causal treatment, that is, treatment directed toward removal of the cause of the disease, pathological condition, or disorder.
  • palliative treatment that is, treatment designed for the relief of symptoms rather than the curing of the disease, pathological condition, or disorder
  • supportive treatment that is, treatment employed to supplement another specific therapy directed toward the improvement of the disease, pathological condition, or disorder.
  • treating also includes symptomatic treatment, that is, treatment directed toward constitutional symptoms of the disease, pathological condition, or disorder.
  • subtherapeutically effective amount is meant an amount of a compound or combination of compounds insufficient on its own to treat a disease, pathological condition, or disorder.
  • Obesity and related metabolic disturbances in schizophrenia constitute a major cause for the 12-18 years shortened life span of the patients afflicted with this illness (Masand et al, 2005).
  • the methods described herein address an issue of substantial public health significance.
  • the diagnostic methods of the invention may have important implications for the primary and secondary prevention of obesity in schizophrenia. For example, increased opioidergic drive may be used to screen patients at risk for the development of obesity. Those found to possess high vulnerability for the development of obesity due to schizophrenia-related alterations in reward function may be counseled to avoid excessive sweet and fat consumption (primary prevention), or targeted for early intervention even in the presence of mild weight problems (secondary prevention).
  • These methods may also be useful for recognition and treatment of hazardous eating habits in patients with other disorders, including obesity (Wang et al, 2001), substance use disorders (Kampov-Polevoy et al, 2001), and major depression (Papakostas et al, 2005).
  • the invention features methods and compositions for the treatment of schizophrenia, and other psychiatric disorders.
  • the methods include administering a second generation antipsychotic (SGA) compound and an opioid receptor antagonist to treat the psychiatric disorder, where this administration desirably results in the treatment of a sequela from the disorder.
  • SGA second generation antipsychotic
  • the invention further features methods for determining the efficacy, or likelihood of efficacy, of the treatment methods described herein. These methods are based on determination of pain sensitivity.
  • Olanzapine is one of the most commonly used second generation antipsychotic drugs (SGAs), and it is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the treatment of schizophrenia, acute mania, agitation in schizophrenia, and in bipolar disorder as well as for maintenance therapy in bipolar disorder.
  • SGAs second generation antipsychotic drugs
  • FDA Food and Drug Administration
  • the superior therapeutic profile of this (and other) SGAs, is however, tarnished by serious morbidity and mortality stemming from SGA-induced obesity and from the associated Metabolic Syndrome. As obesity and its detrimental health consequences are highly prevalent even in medication- free patients, metabolic adverse effects of olanzapine are particularly conspicuous in this patient population (reviewed in Elman et al, 2006).
  • Opioids increase food consumption by promoting homeostatic anabolic processes (i.e., hunger and conservation of energy) and restraining the catabolic processes (i.e., satiety signals) via the hypothalamic orexigenic pathways (Schwartz and Porte, 2005). For example, orexigenic and
  • anorexigenic neuropeptides such as orexin (Sweet et al, 2004) and the brain- derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF; Weickert et al, 2003; Angelucci et al, 2005) are boosted and suppressed, respectively, by the opioids.
  • orexin Soet et al, 2004
  • BDNF brain- derived neurotrophic factor
  • opioids enhance food reward as pleasure and positive affective states produced by consumption of palatable food are mediated via ⁇ -opioid neurotransmission within the scattered network of subcortical and brainstem nuclei (Tanda and Di Chiara, 1998; Saper et al, 2002; Berridge, 2003; Berridge and Robinson, 2003), including the nucleus accumbens, ventral tegmental area, ventral pallidum, nucleus of the solitary tract, parabracbial nucleus, and the amygdala.
  • opioids Beyond the central effects on food intake and appetite, opioids also inhibit peripheral secretion of the main catabolic hormones, insulin (Schleicher, 1989; Garcia-Barrado et al, 2002; Guido et al, 2006) and leptin (Houshyar et al, 2003) and desensitize insulin receptors (Li et al, 2003), potentially by reducing the levels of adiponectin (Housova et al, 2005).
  • adipocyte- derived hormone (Maeda et al, 1996) possessing insulin receptor sensitizing properties (Berg et al, 2002; Haluzik et al, 2004), and its levels appear to be diminished even in drug-free schizophrenics (Cohn et al, 2006).
  • opioidergic mechanisms of obesity are pertinent for schizophrenic patients because robust elevations of endogenous opiate concentrations in the cerebral spinal fluid and in plasma (Terenius et al, 1976; Lindstrom et al, 1978, 1986; Rimon et al, 1980; Brambilla et al, 1984; Marchesi et al, 1995) is a relatively consistent clinical finding in this illness. Opiate levels tend to parallel the severity of psychosis (Terenius et al, 1976; Lindstrom et al, 1978; Rimon et al, 1980;
  • BDNF neurotrophines
  • BDNF neurotrophines
  • mesolimbic dopaminergic neurons Sklair-Tavron et al, 1996.
  • exaggerated opioidergic activity may enhance hedonic preference for sweet and fatty foods (Doyle et al, 1993; Pecina and Berridge, 1995; Kelley et al, 2002; Will et al, 2003).
  • the consumption of these foods further reduces BDNF efficiency in preventing neuronal death (Molteni et al, 2002) and in regulating reward function (Horger et al, 1999; Kernie et al, 2000; Nakagawa et al, 2003), glucose metabolism (Tonra et al, 1999; Nakagawa et al, 2000; Ono et al, 2000), appetitive behaviors (Eisch et al, 2003; Itoh et al, 2004), and other important homeostatic processes (Xu et al, 2003).
  • schizophrenics may relate to pain insensitivity. We believe this and other aberrations in protective mechanisms afforded by the pain system are yet another aspect of excessive/altered endogenous opioid function in
  • pain problems in schizophrenics are apparent in the context of real-life situations, for example, tissue damage following surgical treatment (Kudoh et al, 2000; Murthy et al, 2004), and their consequences range from finger burns caused by cigarette smoking (Jenkins et al, 1996) to such grave medical outcomes as silent myocardial infarction (Marchand, 1955) or delays in management of abdominal emergencies (Katz et al, 1990; Bickerstaff et al, 1988) that could be followed by perforated bowel (Rosenthal et al, 1990) and ruptured appendix (Geschwind, 1977).
  • these compounds may be associated with enhancements in the opioidergic activity, which could further deteriorate the pre-existing metabolic, hedonic, sensory alterations in patients with schizophrenia and be involved in insulin resistance (Newcomer et al, 2002; Henderson et al, 2005a, 2006) and adiponectin
  • the methods of the invention may be employed for any psychiatric disorder in which SGAs are employed as a treatment or in which opioidergic function results in detrimental sequelae.
  • psychiatric disorders treated with SGAs include schizophrenia, autism, psychosis, schizoaffective disorder, mood disorders (e.g., bipolar disorder), anxiety disorders (e.g. post- traumatic stress, obsessive-compulsive), dementia, sleep disorders, eating disorders, drug/alcohol abuse and dependence, impulse control disorders, personality disorders (e.g., borderline and antisocial), and, for the purposes of this invention, neuropathic pain.
  • the subject being treated with the SGA will be under the continuing care of a physician.
  • the subject will not be suffering from comorbid substance abuse, dependence, or withdrawal, such as alcohol, opioid, or cocaine abuse, dependence, or withdrawal.
  • Certain of these disorders e.g., schizophrenia, are associated with sequelae, whether or not treated with an SGA.
  • Such sequelae include sequelae of weight gain, including obesity, metabolic syndrome, insulin resistance, abdominal adiposity, impaired, glucose tolerance, dyslipidaemia, hypercholesterolemia, diabetes, and hypertension, and also pain insensitivity.
  • treatment will be limited to subjects having a body mass index (BMI) greater than or equal to 30 kg/m 2 or a BMI greater than or equal to 27 kg/m 2 plus one symptom of the Metabolic Syndrome, e.g., fasting blood sugar > 125, hypertension, or dyslipidemia.
  • BMI body mass index
  • Treatment may also be limited to subjects whose weight gain is attributable to SGA administration, determined for example by past psychiatric and medical records of pretreatment body weight.
  • Efficacy of treatment may be assessed by reduction in weight or BMI, subjective pain ratings, waist, waist/hip ratio, fasting blood glucose, LDL cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, triglycerides, fat body mass, insulin, leptin, and/or food intake. Weight may be measured using a digital electronic scale and height with a Harpenden stadiometer, calibrated on a weekly basis.
  • Circumferences may be measured at the narrowest waist, umbilicus waist, iliac waist, and broadest hip (buttocks). Waist-hip ratio may be calculated as iliac waist measure relative to the widest hip circumference.
  • Body composition (lean and fat body mass) may be determined by bioelectric impedance analysis (RJL Systems, Clinton Township, MI). A 4-day food assessment may be collected from each subject and analyzed using an extensive nutrient data base (Schakel et al, 1988; Henderson et al, 2005a). Methods for determining pain sensitivity are described herein.
  • SGAs are employed to treat a variety of disorders, as described, herein.
  • Exemplary SGAs include sulpiride, amisulpride, clozapine, olanzapine, aripirazole, ziprasidone, quetiapine, risperidone, remoxipride, zotepine, sertindole, and iloperidone.
  • Use of SGAs may, however, result in, exacerbate, or not address detrimental sequelae, such as sequelae of weight gain and pain insensitivity, in a psychiatric disorder. These sequelae may in turn result in patients stopping therapy or developing additional health problems, potentially more serious than those being treated by the SGA.
  • Opioid antagonism enhances sensitivity of opioid receptors (Zukin et al,
  • opioid antagonists block hedonic responses to sweet foods and sugar-induced analgesia (B lass et al, 1987; Blass and Fitzgerald, 1988) without affecting total energy intake
  • opioid receptor antagonists including naloxone (Thompson et al, 1982; Trenchard and Silverstone, 1983; Cohen et al, 1985; Drewnowski et al, 1992; Macintosh et al, 2001), naltrexone (Fantino et al, 1986; Jonas and Gold, 1986; Melchior et al, 1989; Bertino et al, 1991;
  • opioid antagonism successfully curbed excessive food intake in bulimic patients (Jonas and Gold, 1986; Chatoor et al, 1994; Marrazzi et al, 1995a, 1995b) as well as opioid (Shufman et al, 1994) and alcohol (O'Mara and Wesley, 1994) abuse. Above and beyond their dietary effects, opioid antagonists may also contribute to weight reduction by reasons of diminished hyperinsulinemia and improved insulin sensitivity (Cucinelli et al, 2002; Fruzzetti et al, 2002).
  • opioid receptor antagonists include diprenorphine, naloxone, naltrexone, ⁇ -chlornaltrexamine ( ⁇ -CNA),
  • an opioid receptor antagonist may be predominately active as a ⁇ , ⁇ , or K opioid receptor antagonist, although such agents may also be active at other receptors as well.
  • Naltrexone is a well tolerated opioid antagonist lacking any abuse potential, which is active on ⁇ - and ⁇ -opioid receptors, and to some extent at ⁇ -opioid receptors, ⁇ -opioid receptor specific antagonists include cyprodime,
  • ⁇ -opioid receptor antagonists include naltrindole, ICI174,864 (Evans, et al. The opioid peptides. In: Pasternak GW, ed. The opiate receptors. Clifton, NJ: Humana Press, 1988:23-74), 7- benzylidenenaltrexone (BNTX), and naltriben (NTB).
  • ⁇ -opioid receptor antagonists include nor-binaltorphimine (norBNI), 5'-guanidinonaltrindole (GNTI), (-)-(lR,5R,9R)-5,9-diethyl-2-(3-furylmethyl)-2-hydroxy-6,7- benzomorphan (MR 2266) (Merz, et al. Advances in biochemical
  • naltrexamine a triethylenedioxy derivative of naltrexamine (TENA) (Portoghese et al. Life Sciences 36: 801-5).
  • partial agonists/antagonists may also be employed.
  • Exemplary partial agonists include butorphanol, dezocine, nalbulphine, nalorphine, pentazocine, and buprenorphine .
  • Pleasurable effects of palatable food are conveyed to the frontotemporal cortical structures through ⁇ -opioid neurotransmission within the scattered network of subcortical and brainstem nuclei.
  • patients with enhanced opioidergic drive reflected as diminished activation in reward and sensory regions
  • subjective pain ratings in response to noxious thermal stimulus will be negatively correlated with the weight and the body mass index.
  • a normally painful stimulus will be sensed as less painful in schizophrenics vs. healthy controls. We believe probing reward function will be predictive of therapeutic efficacy of the methods described herein.
  • noxious thermal stimuli 46°C produced significant signal change in the reward regions as well as in classic pain circuitry in healthy subjects (Becerra et al, 2001). Increases in signal were observed in the extended amygdala and the VTA/periaqueductal gray (PAG), while foci of increased-and decreased signal were observed in the NAc. Early and late phases were observed for signals in most brain regions, with early activation in reward related regions such as the extended amygdala, VTA/PAG and NAc. In contrast, structures associated with somatosensory perception, including somatosensory cortex, thalamus, and insula, showed delayed activation. These data support our view that noxious thermal stimuli may be used as a probe for functional integrity of reward circuitry.
  • thermal pain probe as a proxy to measure opioidergic status has ecological validity given that patients with excessive opioidergic drive like those treated with methadone consistently display enhanced hedonic preference for sweet and fatty foods (Willenbring et al, 1989; Zador et al, 1996).
  • the invention also features methods for determining the therapeutic efficacy of treatment with an opioid antagonist. For example, weight loss will be correlated with subjective pain ratings. In addition, we believe that normalization of the pain ratings after initiation of treatment, e.g., after 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, or 6 weeks, will be predictive for weights and BMIs later in treatment, e.g., at 12 weeks. Thus, patients who ultimately respond to naltrexone augmentation (e.g., as determined at 12 weeks) will show
  • Levels of pain sensitivity may be measured relative to a healthy control value, a typical diseased value, or to an individual's level measured previously, e.g., before onset of therapeutic treatment.
  • Quantitive Sensory Testing may be performed to determine the temperatures of subjects' heat pain thresholds.
  • a standard clinical evaluation program may be used to determine pain thresholds. This program includes a series of hot stimuli that are delivered from a baseline temperature of 32°C. The subjects control the heating unit with a computer mouse and tap the mouse button at the first perception of pain. Each stimulus is typically delivered 3-5 times.
  • Thermal stimuli may be delivered to a 3 cm x 3 cm surface on the dorsum of the left hand, using a commercially available Peltier thermode with a thermoconducting surface (MEDOC TSA 2001, Haifa, Israel). This device delivers precise temperatures to the skin via a thermal probe called a thermode.
  • 35°C which is the baseline temperature
  • 41 0 C which produces a "warm” stimulus
  • 46°C which produces a "noxious" heat stimulus.
  • Stimuli may be delivered in the following order: first, subjects receive a series of four alternating stimuli of the baseline 35°C temperature for 36 seconds and the 41°C temperature for 29 seconds.
  • this paradigm may be repeated with four sets of the baseline 35°C temperature and the higher 46°C temperature.
  • a ramp and hold method, with a rate of temperature rise of 4°C/sec may be used.
  • the alternating series with 41 0 C typically precedes the series with 46°C, as the higher temperature may produce hyperalgesia whereas 41 0 C does not affect attenuation from application of a 46°C stimulus.
  • subjects Prior to beginning the thermal experimental paradigm, subjects may be connected to an ECG, pupilometer and galvanic skin response apparatus.
  • Change scores may be computed for pre-to post-"noxious" stimulus and pre-to post-"warm” stimulus. Other methods for determining pain insensitivity are known in the art.
  • administration is preferred, but any other appropriate route of administration may be employed, for example, transdermal (e.g., via a patch), parenteral, intravenous, subcutaneous, intramuscular, intracranial, intraorbital, ophthalmic, intraventricular, intracapsular, intraspinal, intracisternal, intraperitoneal, intranasal, or aerosol administration.
  • Therapeutic formulations may be in the form of liquid solutions or suspensions (as, for example, for intravenous administration); for oral administration, formulations may be in the form of liquids, tablets, or capsules; and for intranasal formulations, in the form of powders, nasal drops, or aerosols.
  • compounds useful in the methods described herein also include encapsulated compounds, e.g., liposome- or polymer-encapsulated compounds.
  • Useful compounds further include those linked (e.g., covalently or non-covalently) to various antibodies, ligands, or other targeting and enveloping or shielding agents (e.g., albumin or dextrose), to allow the compound to reach the target site (e.g., the central nervous system) prior to being removed from the blood stream, e.g., by the kidneys and liver, and prior to being degraded.
  • target site e.g., the central nervous system
  • Formulations for parenteral administration may, for example, contain excipients, sterile water, saline, polyalkylene glycols such as polyethylene glycol, oils of vegetable origin, or hydrogenated naphthalenes.
  • Slow release or extended release delivery systems may be utilized, e.g., to provide a substantially constant release of drug over a period of time.
  • Biocompatible, biodegradable lactide polymer, lactide/glycolide copolymer, or polyoxyethylene-polyoxypropylene copolymers may be used to control the release of the compounds.
  • Other potentially useful parenteral delivery systems include ethylene- vinyl acetate copolymer particles, osmotic pumps,
  • Formulations for inhalation may contain excipients, for example, lactose, or may be aqueous solutions
  • containing for example, polyoxyethylene-9-lauryl ether, glycocholate and deoxycholate, or may be oily solutions for administration in the form of nasal drops, or as a gel.
  • the compounds of the invention are administered at a dosage appropriate to achieve the desired effect and are typically administered in unit dosage form.
  • the dosage preferably ranges from 1 mg per day to 3000 mg per day, e.g., at most 2000 mg, 1000 mg, 600 mg, 500 mg, 100 mg, 50 mg, 10 mg, or 5 mg.
  • olanzapine may be administered at 2-50 mg/day, e.g., 5-15 mg/day or 10-20 mg/day; sulpiride may be administered at 10-3000 mg/day.
  • amisulpride may be administered at 5-1000 mg/day, e.g., 50-300 mg/day
  • clozapine may be administered at 5-2000 mg/day, e.g., 12.5 - 900 mg/day
  • aripirazole may be administered at 2-100 mg/day, e.g., 10-30 mg/day
  • ziprasidone may be administered at 2-1000 mg/day, e.g., 20-200 mg/day
  • quetiapine may be administered at 15-2000 mg/day, e.g., 150-700 mg/day
  • risperidone may be administered at 1-16, e.g., 4- 6 mg/day
  • remoxipride may be administered at 5-2000 mg/day, e.g., 75-600 mg/day
  • zotepine may be administered at 15-1000 mg/day, e.g., 150-300 mg/day
  • sertindole may be administered at 1-200 mg/day
  • the dosage preferably ranges from 0.0001 to 1000 mg per day, e.g., at most 100 mg, 10 mg, 1 mg, 0.1 mg, 0.01 mg, or 0.001 mg.
  • naltrexone may be administered at 0.0001-500 mg/day, e.g., 25- 50 mg/day
  • naloxone may be administered at 0.001-100 mg/day, e.g., 0.1 to 10 mg/day
  • nalmefene may be administered at 0.0001-10 mg/day , e.g., 0.001-1 mg/day
  • butorphanol may be administered at 0.1-100 mg/day, e.g., 1-32 mg/day
  • dezocine may be administered at 0.1-1000 mg/day, e.g., 5-120 mg/day
  • nalbulphine may be administered at 1 - 1000 mg/day, e.g.
  • naltrexone is administered in conjunction with 10-20 mg of olanzapine.
  • Naltrexone may also be
  • Vivitrol® 380 mg gluteal IM injection
  • VP004 VP004
  • opioid receptor antagonists may be administered in similar fashion.
  • the ratio of amount of opioid receptor antagonist to SGA may be at most 1 :1, 1:10, 1:100, 1:1,000, 1 :10,000, 1:100,000, 1:1,000,000,
  • the two compounds may be administered concomitantly, either in the same or different formulations, or at different times.
  • the exact dosage of the compound may be dependent, for example, upon the age and weight of the recipient, the route of administration, and the severity and nature of the symptoms to be treated. Other factors that may affect the dosing include age of illness' onset; duration of illness, diagnostic subtype, severity of symptoms, dose and plasma levels of SGA, past/current substance use and smoking habits; current use of other medications; pain threshold; affective symptom severity; dietary habits, socioeconomic status; and physical activity and other life style-related factors.
  • the dosage selected should be sufficient to prevent, ameliorate, or treat a particular indication, or one or more symptoms thereof, or effect a particular outcome without producing significant toxic or undesirable side effects.
  • the SGA, opioid receptor antagonist, or both may be administered in an individually subtherapeutically effective amount.
  • the preferred route of administration for most indications is oral.
  • additional therapeutic compounds may be employed in the methods of the invention, such as Zolpidem tartrate, e.g., up to a maximum dose of 10 mg/day, or zaleplon, e.g., up to a maximum dose of 20 mg/day for insomnia as clinically indicated.
  • Zolpidem tartrate e.g., up to a maximum dose of 10 mg/day
  • zaleplon e.g., up to a maximum dose of 20 mg/day for insomnia as clinically indicated.
  • Other examples include lorazepam for agitation at the discretion of the treating clinician.
  • lorazepam within six hours of the administration of rating scales is desirably avoided.
  • concomitant administration of other therapeutic compounds is not employed.
  • medications or drugs with prominent orexigenic/anorexigenic effects e.g., anticholinergics, insulin, oral hypoglycemics, amphetamines, mood stabilizers, opioid analgesics, anti-depressants including tricyclics, SSRIs, MAO inhibitors, bupropion, and mirtazepine, may be excluded from the methods described herein.
  • ACRP30/adiponectin an adipokine regulating glucose and lipid metabolism.
  • Naltrexone an opioid blocker, alters taste perception and nutrient intake in humans. Am J Physiol, 261(1 Pt 2):R59-R63.
  • Brain-derived neurotrophic factor in the ventral midbrain-nucleus accumbens pathway a role in
  • naltrexone reduces preference for sucrose in humans.
  • Olanzapine treatment is associated with reduced high molecular weight adiponectin in serum: a potential mechanism for olanzapine-induced insulin resistance in patients with schizophrenia. J Clin Psychopharmacol, 26(3) :232- 237.
  • Naltrexone pretreatment decreases the reinforcing effectiveness of ethanol and saccharin but not PCP or food under concurrent progressive-ratio schedules in rhesus monkeys.
  • Beta-endorphin inhibits insulin secretion from isolated pancreatic islets. Endocrinology, 124(3): 1254- 1258.
  • Brain-derived neurotrophic factor improves blood glucose control and alleviates fasting hyperglycemia in

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Abstract

In general, the invention provides methods and compositions for treating sequela of weight gain or pain insensitivity, e.g., in a subject suffering from a psychiatric disorder, such as schizophrenia. The combinations employed in the invention include a second generation antipsychotic agent and an opioid receptor antagonist.

Description

TREATMENT OF SEQUELAE OF PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application claims benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/748,471, filed December 8, 2005, hereby incorporated by reference. BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The invention relates to the field of treatment of sequelae of psychiatric disorders.
Obesity has reached pandemic proportions, and it is rapidly surpassing smoking as the number one killer in the industrialized world. Its annual cost to American society is staggering and is estimated to be around $117 billion due to related illnesses and loss of productivity.
In schizophrenia, obesity is twice as prevalent as in the general public, afflicting over half the patient population. Besides negative psychosocial impacts (e.g., distorted self-esteem and societal stigmatization) and
medications noncompliance, schizophrenics appear to be particularly
susceptible to the detrimental medical sequelae of obesity such as the
Metabolic Syndrome or a cluster of cardiovascular risk factors, including abdominal adiposity, insulin resistance, impaired glucose tolerance,
dyslipidaemia, and hypertension.
As documented in historical observations prior to the advent of antipsychotic agents, schizophrenia per se is associated with increased risk for obesity. The mechanisms of obesity in schizophrenia are not fully elucidated and could result from increased caloric intake, decreased energy expenditure owing to reduced physical activity, or a combination of both. Excessive caloric supply seems to play a major role, though, as schizophrenics tend to
overconsume palatable 'junk' food, rich in sugar and saturated fat, that produces a substantial amount of body weight gain. These unhealthy eating habits ostensibly reflect illness' neuropathology, rather than patients' inability to afford healthier food choices, as they predict poor prognosis, including increased length of hospitalizations and deteriorated social functioning.
Administration of second generation antipsychotic agents (SGAs), such as clozapine, olanzapine, and to lesser degree quetiapine and risperidone, but not ziprasidone or aripiprazole, further worsens body weight gain problems mainly due to amplified and potentially insatiable appetite leading to increased consumption of the previously preferred diet.
Accordingly, there is a need for treatments of schizophrenia, and other psychiatric disorders, that reduce detrimental sequelae.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
In general, the invention features the combination of second generation antipsychotic agents (SGAs) and opioid receptor antagonists and methods of their use. In one aspect, the invention provides a method of treating a sequela of weight gain or pain insensitivity in a subject, e.g., suffering from a psychiatric disorder, treated with a SGA by administering an opioid receptor antagonist to the subject in an amount sufficient to treat the sequela. In a related aspect, the invention provides a method of treating a psychiatric disorder by administering a SGA and an opioid receptor antagonist to a subject suffering from the psychiatric disorder in an amount sufficient to treat the psychiatric disorder, wherein the administration results in a reduction of a sequela of weight gain or pain insensitivity. The invention further provides a method of treating a sequela of weight gain or pain insensitivity in a subject suffering from a psychiatric disorder by administering a SGA and an opioid receptor antagonist to the subject in an amount sufficient to treat the sequela or pain insensitivity.
Treatment methods may also include a diagnosis of the particular disorder or condition by a physician or other medical professional prior to administration of the therapeutic regimen to the patient for treating the particular disorder or condition. Administration of the therapeutic compounds may also occur under the continuing care of a physician or medical
professional.
The opioid receptor antagonist may be a μ, δ, or K opioid receptor antagonist or a partial agonist, e.g., butorphanol, dezocine, nalbulphine, pentazocine, or buprenorphine. Exemplary opioid receptor antagonists include diprenorphine, naloxone, naltrexone, β- chlornaltrexamine, WIN44,441-3, nahnefene, alvimopan (ADL 8-2698), methylnatrexone, cyprodime,
naloxonazine, naloxazone, β-funaltrexamine, CTOP, naltrindole, ICI 174,864, 7-benzylidenenaltrexone, naltriben, nor-binaltorphimine, 5'- guanidinonaltrindole, (-)-(lR,5R,9R)-5,9-diethyl-2-(3-furylmethyl)-2-hydroxy- 6,7-benzomorphan (MR 2266), and a triethylenedioxy derivative of
naltrexamine (TENA). Exemplary SGAs include sulpiride, amisulpride, clozapine, olanzapine, aripirazole, ziprasidone, quetiapine, risperidone, remoxipride, zotepine, sertindole, and iloperidone.
Exemplary psychiatric disorders include schizophrenia, autism, psychosis, schizoaffective disorder, mood disorders, anxiety disorders, dementia, sleep disorders, eating disorders, drug or alcohol abuse and dependence, impulse control disorders, personality disorders, and neuropathic pain. Sequelae of weight gain include weight gain, obesity, metabolic syndrome, insulin resistance, abdominal adiposity, impaired, glucose tolerance, dyslipidaemia, hypercholesterolemia, diabetes, and hypertension.
For opioid receptor antagonists, the dosage may range from 0.0001 to 1000 mg per day. In various embodiments, the opioid receptor antagonist is administered at less than 10 mg, 1 mg, 0.1 mg, 0.01 mg, or 0.001 mg per day. The ratio of opioid receptor antagonist to SGA may also be at most 1 : 1,000. Other dosages are described herein.
The methods and combinations described herein may also be used in preventing a sequela of weight gain or pain insensitivity in a subject. The invention also features a method of determining the efficacy of treatment with an SGA and an opioid receptor antagonist by determining the pain sensitivity of a subject having been administered an SGA and an opioid receptor antagonist. An increase in the level of pain sensitivity after
administration of the SGA and opioid receptor antagonist is indicative of therapeutic efficacy.
The invention further features a method for determining a propensity for a subject to gain weight from SGA treatment by determining the pain sensitivity of the subject, wherein a decreased level of pain sensitivity compared to a healthy control is indicative of the propensity for the subject to gain weight from SGA treatment. If the subject has a decreased level of pain sensitivity, this method may further include administering an SGA and an opioid receptor antagonist in an amount effective to treat a sequela of weight gain.
In another aspect, the invention provides a pharmaceutical composition including (i) a second generation antipsychotic agent (SGA) and (ii) an opioid antagonist. The opioid antagonist is desirably present in an amount effective to reduce a sequela of weight gain or pain insensitivity, as described herein. The invention further features a kit including (i) a second generation antipsychotic agent (SGA), (ii) an opioid antagonist, and optionally (iii) instructions for administering the SGA and opioid antagonist to treat a psychiatric disorder while reducing a sequela of weight gain or pain insensitivity. In various kits and compositions, the opioid receptor antagonist may be present at less than 1 mg, 0.1 mg, 0.01 mg, or 0.001 mg. Moreover, the ratio of opioid receptor antagonist to SGA is preferably at most 1 : 1 ,000. In further embodiments, the SGA is present in a subtherapeutically effective amount. Other dosages are described herein.
In certain embodiments, the subject being treated does not suffer from co-morbid substance abuse or dependence, e.g., alcohol, opioid, or cocaine. In certain other embodiments, an opioid antagonist other than naltrexone or naloxone is employed to treat pain insensitivity or subjects suffering from co- morbid alcohol, opioid, or cocaine abuse or dependence. Combinations of two or more SGAs and/or opioid antagonists may also be employed in the methods and compositions described herein. Any of the SGAs described herein may be administered with any of the opioid receptor antagonists.
By "sequela of weight gain" is meant any medical condition that results from weight gain caused by a psychiatric disorder, treatment of the disorder, or a combination thereof. Sequela of weight gain include, without limitation, weight gain, obesity, metabolic syndrome, insulin resistance, abdominal adiposity, impaired glucose tolerance, dyslipidaemia, hypercholesterolemia, diabetes, and hypertension.
By "second generation antipsychotic agent" or "SGA" is meant an antipsychotic agent other than chlorpromazine, droperidol, fiuphenazine, haloperidol, loxapine, mesoridazine, molindone, perphenazine, pimozide, prochlorperazine, promazine, thioridazine, thiothixene, and trifluoperazine. In general, SGAs produce fewer extrapyrimidal side effects than first generation antipsychotic agents.
By "opioid receptor antagonist" is meant an agent that decreases opioidergic function by any mechanism.
By "preventing" is meant medical management of a patient directed to prevention of a disease, pathological condition, or disorder.
By "treating" is meant the medical management of a patient with the intent that a cure or amelioration of a disease, pathological condition, or disorder will result. This term includes active treatment, that is, treatment directed specifically toward improvement of a disease, pathological condition, or disorder, and also includes causal treatment, that is, treatment directed toward removal of the cause of the disease, pathological condition, or disorder. In addition, this term includes palliative treatment, that is, treatment designed for the relief of symptoms rather than the curing of the disease, pathological condition, or disorder; and supportive treatment, that is, treatment employed to supplement another specific therapy directed toward the improvement of the disease, pathological condition, or disorder. The term "treating" also includes symptomatic treatment, that is, treatment directed toward constitutional symptoms of the disease, pathological condition, or disorder.
By "subtherapeutically effective amount" is meant an amount of a compound or combination of compounds insufficient on its own to treat a disease, pathological condition, or disorder.
Obesity and related metabolic disturbances in schizophrenia constitute a major cause for the 12-18 years shortened life span of the patients afflicted with this illness (Masand et al, 2005). Thus, the methods described herein address an issue of substantial public health significance. Furthermore, the diagnostic methods of the invention may have important implications for the primary and secondary prevention of obesity in schizophrenia. For example, increased opioidergic drive may be used to screen patients at risk for the development of obesity. Those found to possess high vulnerability for the development of obesity due to schizophrenia-related alterations in reward function may be counseled to avoid excessive sweet and fat consumption (primary prevention), or targeted for early intervention even in the presence of mild weight problems (secondary prevention). These methods may also be useful for recognition and treatment of hazardous eating habits in patients with other disorders, including obesity (Wang et al, 2001), substance use disorders (Kampov-Polevoy et al, 2001), and major depression (Papakostas et al, 2005).
Other features and advantages will be apparent from the following description and the claims.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
The invention features methods and compositions for the treatment of schizophrenia, and other psychiatric disorders. The methods include administering a second generation antipsychotic (SGA) compound and an opioid receptor antagonist to treat the psychiatric disorder, where this administration desirably results in the treatment of a sequela from the disorder. We believe that such sequelae result from opioidergic activity and that antagonism of this opioidergic activity will treat the sequelae.
The invention further features methods for determining the efficacy, or likelihood of efficacy, of the treatment methods described herein. These methods are based on determination of pain sensitivity.
Schizophrenia and Obesity
Olanzapine (Zyprexa®) is one of the most commonly used second generation antipsychotic drugs (SGAs), and it is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the treatment of schizophrenia, acute mania, agitation in schizophrenia, and in bipolar disorder as well as for maintenance therapy in bipolar disorder. The superior therapeutic profile of this (and other) SGAs, is however, tarnished by serious morbidity and mortality stemming from SGA-induced obesity and from the associated Metabolic Syndrome. As obesity and its detrimental health consequences are highly prevalent even in medication- free patients, metabolic adverse effects of olanzapine are particularly conspicuous in this patient population (reviewed in Elman et al, 2006).
The mechanisms of obesity in schizophrenics are likely to be
multifactorial and to involve both pharmacological and neuropathological facets (reviewed in Elman et al, 2006; Remington, 2006). Among central and peripheral factors underlying obesity, we believe that the opioid system plays a critical role. Opioids increase food consumption by promoting homeostatic anabolic processes (i.e., hunger and conservation of energy) and restraining the catabolic processes (i.e., satiety signals) via the hypothalamic orexigenic pathways (Schwartz and Porte, 2005). For example, orexigenic and
anorexigenic neuropeptides such as orexin (Sweet et al, 2004) and the brain- derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF; Weickert et al, 2003; Angelucci et al, 2005) are boosted and suppressed, respectively, by the opioids. Moreover, opioids enhance food reward as pleasure and positive affective states produced by consumption of palatable food are mediated via μ-opioid neurotransmission within the scattered network of subcortical and brainstem nuclei (Tanda and Di Chiara, 1998; Saper et al, 2002; Berridge, 2003; Berridge and Robinson, 2003), including the nucleus accumbens, ventral tegmental area, ventral pallidum, nucleus of the solitary tract, parabracbial nucleus, and the amygdala.
Beyond the central effects on food intake and appetite, opioids also inhibit peripheral secretion of the main catabolic hormones, insulin (Schleicher, 1989; Garcia-Barrado et al, 2002; Guido et al, 2006) and leptin (Houshyar et al, 2003) and desensitize insulin receptors (Li et al, 2003), potentially by reducing the levels of adiponectin (Housova et al, 2005). The latter is an adipocyte- derived hormone (Maeda et al, 1996) possessing insulin receptor sensitizing properties (Berg et al, 2002; Haluzik et al, 2004), and its levels appear to be diminished even in drug-free schizophrenics (Cohn et al, 2006).
Without being bound by any mechanism, we believe opioidergic mechanisms of obesity are pertinent for schizophrenic patients because robust elevations of endogenous opiate concentrations in the cerebral spinal fluid and in plasma (Terenius et al, 1976; Lindstrom et al, 1978, 1986; Rimon et al, 1980; Brambilla et al, 1984; Marchesi et al, 1995) is a relatively consistent clinical finding in this illness. Opiate levels tend to parallel the severity of psychosis (Terenius et al, 1976; Lindstrom et al, 1978; Rimon et al, 1980;
Marchesi et al, 1995), suggesting involvement of this neurochemical effect in schizophrenia neuropathology (Volavka et al, 1979; Schmauss and Emrich, 1985; Nemeroff and Bissette, 1988).
One possible involvement is through opiate's interference with the neurotrophines (e.g., BDNF) supporting neuronal survival (Weickert et al, 2003; Angelucci et al, 2005) with consequential damage of mesolimbic dopaminergic neurons (Sklair-Tavron et al, 1996). Furthermore, similarly to methadone-maintained patients (Willenbring et al, 1989; Zador et al, 1996), exaggerated opioidergic activity may enhance hedonic preference for sweet and fatty foods (Doyle et al, 1993; Pecina and Berridge, 1995; Kelley et al, 2002; Will et al, 2003). The consumption of these foods further reduces BDNF efficiency in preventing neuronal death (Molteni et al, 2002) and in regulating reward function (Horger et al, 1999; Kernie et al, 2000; Nakagawa et al, 2003), glucose metabolism (Tonra et al, 1999; Nakagawa et al, 2000; Ono et al, 2000), appetitive behaviors (Eisch et al, 2003; Itoh et al, 2004), and other important homeostatic processes (Xu et al, 2003).
Another manifestation of alterations in endogenous opioids in
schizophrenics may relate to pain insensitivity. We believe this and other aberrations in protective mechanisms afforded by the pain system are yet another aspect of excessive/altered endogenous opioid function in
schizophrenia (Davis et al, 1979; Evans, 1980; Davis and Buchsbaum, 1981; Fishbain, 1982; Bickerstaff et al, 1988; Rosenthal et al, 1990; Dworkin, 1994; Kudoh et al, 2000; Torrey, 2002; Singh et al, 2006; Haslam, 1798, 1809 cited in Torrey, 2002; Kraepelin, 1919 cited in Hooley and Delgado, 2001 ; Bleuler, 1924 cited in Hooley and Delgado, 2001 ; Davis, 1983; and Wiegant et al, 1992). This view is supported clinically by reversal of pain insensitivity by opioid antagonism (Davis et al, 1979) and by molecular abnormalities in specific opioid genes, for example, prodynorphin (Ventriglia et al, 2002) or proenkephalin (Mikesell et al, 1996) in schizophrenic patients. Importantly, pain problems in schizophrenics are apparent in the context of real-life situations, for example, tissue damage following surgical treatment (Kudoh et al, 2000; Murthy et al, 2004), and their consequences range from finger burns caused by cigarette smoking (Jenkins et al, 1996) to such grave medical outcomes as silent myocardial infarction (Marchand, 1955) or delays in management of abdominal emergencies (Katz et al, 1990; Bickerstaff et al, 1988) that could be followed by perforated bowel (Rosenthal et al, 1990) and ruptured appendix (Geschwind, 1977).
Among the complex mix of SGAs' pharmacological properties, these compounds may be associated with enhancements in the opioidergic activity, which could further deteriorate the pre-existing metabolic, hedonic, sensory alterations in patients with schizophrenia and be involved in insulin resistance (Newcomer et al, 2002; Henderson et al, 2005a, 2006) and adiponectin
(Richards et al, 2006) decrements associated with these drugs. Several lines of clinical and preclinical evidence support our view. These include clinical presentation of olanzapine overdose, which is similar to opioid intoxication (O'Malley et al, 1999; Kochhar et al, 2002; Palenzona et al, 2004; Theisen et al, 2005) and ahalgesic/antinociceptive properties of olanzapine observed in both human (Kiser et al, 2001; Silberstein et al, 2002; Khojainova et al, 2002;
Gorski and Willis, 2003 ; Fishbain et al, 2004) and rodent (Schreiber et al, 1999; Weizman et al, 2003) models and partially ascribed to the opioid mechanisms (Schreiber et al, 1999; Weizman et al, 2003).
Treatment of Psychiatric Disorders
The methods of the invention may be employed for any psychiatric disorder in which SGAs are employed as a treatment or in which opioidergic function results in detrimental sequelae. Examples of psychiatric disorders treated with SGAs include schizophrenia, autism, psychosis, schizoaffective disorder, mood disorders (e.g., bipolar disorder), anxiety disorders (e.g. post- traumatic stress, obsessive-compulsive), dementia, sleep disorders, eating disorders, drug/alcohol abuse and dependence, impulse control disorders, personality disorders (e.g., borderline and antisocial), and, for the purposes of this invention, neuropathic pain.
In general, the subject being treated with the SGA will be under the continuing care of a physician. In certain embodiments, the subject will not be suffering from comorbid substance abuse, dependence, or withdrawal, such as alcohol, opioid, or cocaine abuse, dependence, or withdrawal. Certain of these disorders, e.g., schizophrenia, are associated with sequelae, whether or not treated with an SGA. Such sequelae include sequelae of weight gain, including obesity, metabolic syndrome, insulin resistance, abdominal adiposity, impaired, glucose tolerance, dyslipidaemia, hypercholesterolemia, diabetes, and hypertension, and also pain insensitivity. In certain embodiments, treatment will be limited to subjects having a body mass index (BMI) greater than or equal to 30 kg/m2 or a BMI greater than or equal to 27 kg/m2 plus one symptom of the Metabolic Syndrome, e.g., fasting blood sugar > 125, hypertension, or dyslipidemia. Treatment may also be limited to subjects whose weight gain is attributable to SGA administration, determined for example by past psychiatric and medical records of pretreatment body weight.
Efficacy of treatment may be assessed by reduction in weight or BMI, subjective pain ratings, waist, waist/hip ratio, fasting blood glucose, LDL cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, triglycerides, fat body mass, insulin, leptin, and/or food intake. Weight may be measured using a digital electronic scale and height with a Harpenden stadiometer, calibrated on a weekly basis.
Circumferences may be measured at the narrowest waist, umbilicus waist, iliac waist, and broadest hip (buttocks). Waist-hip ratio may be calculated as iliac waist measure relative to the widest hip circumference. Body composition (lean and fat body mass) may be determined by bioelectric impedance analysis (RJL Systems, Clinton Township, MI). A 4-day food assessment may be collected from each subject and analyzed using an extensive nutrient data base (Schakel et al, 1988; Henderson et al, 2005a). Methods for determining pain sensitivity are described herein.
Second Generation Antipsychotic Agents
SGAs are employed to treat a variety of disorders, as described, herein. Exemplary SGAs include sulpiride, amisulpride, clozapine, olanzapine, aripirazole, ziprasidone, quetiapine, risperidone, remoxipride, zotepine, sertindole, and iloperidone. Use of SGAs may, however, result in, exacerbate, or not address detrimental sequelae, such as sequelae of weight gain and pain insensitivity, in a psychiatric disorder. These sequelae may in turn result in patients stopping therapy or developing additional health problems, potentially more serious than those being treated by the SGA.
Opioid Receptor Antagonists
Opioid antagonism enhances sensitivity of opioid receptors (Zukin et al,
1982; Lesscher et al, 2003) and diminishes tolerance and physical dependence on opioids (Powell et al, 2002). In rodent studies, opioid antagonists block hedonic responses to sweet foods and sugar-induced analgesia (B lass et al, 1987; Blass and Fitzgerald, 1988) without affecting total energy intake
(Berridge, 1996; Rodefer et al, 1999). Moreover, all but one human study (Hetherington et al, 1991) employing opioid receptor antagonists, including naloxone (Thompson et al, 1982; Trenchard and Silverstone, 1983; Cohen et al, 1985; Drewnowski et al, 1992; Macintosh et al, 2001), naltrexone (Fantino et al, 1986; Jonas and Gold, 1986; Melchior et al, 1989; Bertino et al, 1991;
Chatoor et al, 1994; Yeomans and Gray, 1996, 1997), and nalmefene
(Yeomans et al, 1990; Yeomans and Wright, 1991), found significant decreases in caloric intake (Yeomans and Gray, 2002). In clinical populations, opioid antagonism successfully curbed excessive food intake in bulimic patients (Jonas and Gold, 1986; Chatoor et al, 1994; Marrazzi et al, 1995a, 1995b) as well as opioid (Shufman et al, 1994) and alcohol (O'Mara and Wesley, 1994) abuse. Above and beyond their dietary effects, opioid antagonists may also contribute to weight reduction by reasons of diminished hyperinsulinemia and improved insulin sensitivity (Cucinelli et al, 2002; Fruzzetti et al, 2002).
Any opioid receptor antagonist may be employed in the methods and compositions of the invention. Exemplary opioid receptor antagonists include diprenorphine, naloxone, naltrexone, β-chlornaltrexamine (β-CNA),
WIN44,441-3 (Faden, et al. Neurology 35:1311-1315, 1985.), nalmefene, alvimopan (ADL 8-2698), and methylnatrexone. In addition, an opioid receptor antagonist may be predominately active as a μ, δ, or K opioid receptor antagonist, although such agents may also be active at other receptors as well. Naltrexone is a well tolerated opioid antagonist lacking any abuse potential, which is active on μ- and κ-opioid receptors, and to some extent at δ-opioid receptors, μ-opioid receptor specific antagonists include cyprodime,
naloxonazine, naloxazone, β-fiinaltrexamine (β-FNA), and CTOP (Pelton, et al. J. Med. Chem. 29: 2370-2375, 1986). δ-opioid receptor antagonists include naltrindole, ICI174,864 (Evans, et al. The opioid peptides. In: Pasternak GW, ed. The opiate receptors. Clifton, NJ: Humana Press, 1988:23-74), 7- benzylidenenaltrexone (BNTX), and naltriben (NTB). κ-opioid receptor antagonists include nor-binaltorphimine (norBNI), 5'-guanidinonaltrindole (GNTI), (-)-(lR,5R,9R)-5,9-diethyl-2-(3-furylmethyl)-2-hydroxy-6,7- benzomorphan (MR 2266) (Merz, et al. Advances in biochemical
psychopharmacology, VoI 8: 91-107), and a triethylenedioxy derivative of naltrexamine (TENA) (Portoghese et al. Life Sciences 36: 801-5). In addition, partial agonists/antagonists may also be employed. Exemplary partial agonists include butorphanol, dezocine, nalbulphine, nalorphine, pentazocine, and buprenorphine .
Pain Insensitivity
Pleasurable effects of palatable food are conveyed to the frontotemporal cortical structures through μ-opioid neurotransmission within the scattered network of subcortical and brainstem nuclei. Thus, patients with enhanced opioidergic drive (reflected as diminished activation in reward and sensory regions) tend to consume more unhealthy palatable nutrition resulting in greater body weight gain. Hence, at baseline in subjects with schizophrenia, subjective pain ratings in response to noxious thermal stimulus will be negatively correlated with the weight and the body mass index. Thus, a normally painful stimulus will be sensed as less painful in schizophrenics vs. healthy controls. We believe probing reward function will be predictive of therapeutic efficacy of the methods described herein. The experience of pain is thought to be related to the underlying status of the brain reward system (Le Magnen et al, 1980; Gear et al, 1999; Koyama et al, 2001). Evidence linking reward with pain arises from neuroimaging data, in which a shared neuroanatomic substrate was demonstrated for reward and pain by observing that both putative reward circuits and classic pain circuitry were activated when healthy controls were exposed to noxious thermal stimuli (Becerra et al, 2001). In schizophrenia, however, we believe that noxious afferents are not exerting the effects on reward circuitry that are observed in healthy people, which could be yet another aspect of excessive/altered endogenous opioid function (Davis et al, 1979; Davis and Buchsbaum, 1981; Davis, 1983; Wiegant et al, 1992).
Without being bound by any mechanism, we believe that a mesolimbic hyperdopaminergic state associated with schizophrenia may render
motivational/incentive reward system insensitive to low salience/palatability food. This, together with poor cognitive control from hypofunctional prefrontal cortex and enhanced hedonic impact of food, owing to exaggerated opioidergic drive (clinically manifested as pain insensitivity), may underlie unhealthy eating habits in patients with schizophrenia. Furthermore, treatment with SGAs purportedly improves dopamine-mediated reward aspects, but at the cost of increased appetite and worsened or at least not improved opiodergic capacity, which can further deteriorate metabolic problems.
Further evidence suggests a link between homeostatic and reward functions. Twelve cocaine-dependent individuals received an intravenous bolus of a pharmacological reward, cocaine, and Cortisol in a double-blind randomized placebo-controlled and counterbalanced fashion. Their plasma was assayed over the next 120 minutes for the levels of two catabolic hormones, namely insulin and leptin. Cocaine (but not Cortisol) injection produced significant decreases in insulin, but not in leptin. Notably, when baseline insulin and leptin levels along with BMIs were considered, they predicted baseline, withdrawal-related cocaine craving, accounting for approximately 76% of the variance, while BMIs predicted cocaine-primed craving and euphoria i.e., high.
It has also been observed that noxious thermal stimuli (46°C) produced significant signal change in the reward regions as well as in classic pain circuitry in healthy subjects (Becerra et al, 2001). Increases in signal were observed in the extended amygdala and the VTA/periaqueductal gray (PAG), while foci of increased-and decreased signal were observed in the NAc. Early and late phases were observed for signals in most brain regions, with early activation in reward related regions such as the extended amygdala, VTA/PAG and NAc. In contrast, structures associated with somatosensory perception, including somatosensory cortex, thalamus, and insula, showed delayed activation. These data support our view that noxious thermal stimuli may be used as a probe for functional integrity of reward circuitry.
The use of the thermal pain probe as a proxy to measure opioidergic status has ecological validity given that patients with excessive opioidergic drive like those treated with methadone consistently display enhanced hedonic preference for sweet and fatty foods (Willenbring et al, 1989; Zador et al, 1996).
Accordingly, the invention also features methods for determining the therapeutic efficacy of treatment with an opioid antagonist. For example, weight loss will be correlated with subjective pain ratings. In addition, we believe that normalization of the pain ratings after initiation of treatment, e.g., after 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, or 6 weeks, will be predictive for weights and BMIs later in treatment, e.g., at 12 weeks. Thus, patients who ultimately respond to naltrexone augmentation (e.g., as determined at 12 weeks) will show
significant, partial normalization in responses to the sensory stimulus earlier in treatment, e.g., at 6 weeks. These effects may also be used to screen persons at risk for the development of obesity, and those found to possess high
vulnerability for excessive body weight gain (i.e., increased opioidergic drive) may be counseled to avoid palatable food exposure (primary prevention), or targeted for early intervention with opioid antagonists even in the presence of mild weight problems (secondary prevention). Levels of pain sensitivity may be measured relative to a healthy control value, a typical diseased value, or to an individual's level measured previously, e.g., before onset of therapeutic treatment.
Quantitive Sensory Testing (QST) may be performed to determine the temperatures of subjects' heat pain thresholds. A standard clinical evaluation program may be used to determine pain thresholds. This program includes a series of hot stimuli that are delivered from a baseline temperature of 32°C. The subjects control the heating unit with a computer mouse and tap the mouse button at the first perception of pain. Each stimulus is typically delivered 3-5 times. Thermal stimuli may be delivered to a 3 cm x 3 cm surface on the dorsum of the left hand, using a commercially available Peltier thermode with a thermoconducting surface (MEDOC TSA 2001, Haifa, Israel). This device delivers precise temperatures to the skin via a thermal probe called a thermode. In one protocol, three temperatures will be used: 1) 35°C, which is the baseline temperature; 2) 410C, which produces a "warm" stimulus; and 3) 46°C, which produces a "noxious" heat stimulus. Stimuli may be delivered in the following order: first, subjects receive a series of four alternating stimuli of the baseline 35°C temperature for 36 seconds and the 41°C temperature for 29 seconds.
After five minutes, this paradigm may be repeated with four sets of the baseline 35°C temperature and the higher 46°C temperature. A ramp and hold method, with a rate of temperature rise of 4°C/sec may be used. The alternating series with 410C typically precedes the series with 46°C, as the higher temperature may produce hyperalgesia whereas 410C does not affect attenuation from application of a 46°C stimulus. After each stimulus is delivered, subjects rate with a four-button button-press their subjective experience of pain intensity. Ratings range from 0=no pain to 4=unbearable pain. Prior to beginning the thermal experimental paradigm, subjects may be connected to an ECG, pupilometer and galvanic skin response apparatus. These three devices may be used to monitor physiological parameters, and to correlate these parameters with thermal stimulation and pain intensity ratings. Change scores may be computed for pre-to post-"noxious" stimulus and pre-to post-"warm" stimulus. Other methods for determining pain insensitivity are known in the art.
Administrati on
Conventional pharmaceutical practice is employed to provide suitable formulations or compositions for administration to patients. Oral
administration is preferred, but any other appropriate route of administration may be employed, for example, transdermal (e.g., via a patch), parenteral, intravenous, subcutaneous, intramuscular, intracranial, intraorbital, ophthalmic, intraventricular, intracapsular, intraspinal, intracisternal, intraperitoneal, intranasal, or aerosol administration. Therapeutic formulations may be in the form of liquid solutions or suspensions (as, for example, for intravenous administration); for oral administration, formulations may be in the form of liquids, tablets, or capsules; and for intranasal formulations, in the form of powders, nasal drops, or aerosols. In addition, compounds useful in the methods described herein also include encapsulated compounds, e.g., liposome- or polymer-encapsulated compounds. Useful compounds further include those linked (e.g., covalently or non-covalently) to various antibodies, ligands, or other targeting and enveloping or shielding agents (e.g., albumin or dextrose), to allow the compound to reach the target site (e.g., the central nervous system) prior to being removed from the blood stream, e.g., by the kidneys and liver, and prior to being degraded.
Methods well known in the art for making formulations are described, for example, in Remington: The Science and Practice of Pharmacy (20th ed.) ed. A.R. Gennaro, Lippincott: Philadelphia 2003. Formulations for parenteral administration may, for example, contain excipients, sterile water, saline, polyalkylene glycols such as polyethylene glycol, oils of vegetable origin, or hydrogenated naphthalenes. Slow release or extended release delivery systems may be utilized, e.g., to provide a substantially constant release of drug over a period of time.
Biocompatible, biodegradable lactide polymer, lactide/glycolide copolymer, or polyoxyethylene-polyoxypropylene copolymers may be used to control the release of the compounds. Other potentially useful parenteral delivery systems include ethylene- vinyl acetate copolymer particles, osmotic pumps,
implantable infusion systems, and liposomes. Formulations for inhalation may contain excipients, for example, lactose, or may be aqueous solutions
containing, for example, polyoxyethylene-9-lauryl ether, glycocholate and deoxycholate, or may be oily solutions for administration in the form of nasal drops, or as a gel.
In general, the compounds of the invention are administered at a dosage appropriate to achieve the desired effect and are typically administered in unit dosage form. For SGAs, the dosage preferably ranges from 1 mg per day to 3000 mg per day, e.g., at most 2000 mg, 1000 mg, 600 mg, 500 mg, 100 mg, 50 mg, 10 mg, or 5 mg. For example, olanzapine may be administered at 2-50 mg/day, e.g., 5-15 mg/day or 10-20 mg/day; sulpiride may be administered at 10-3000 mg/day. e.g., 100-2400 mg/day, amisulpride may be administered at 5-1000 mg/day, e.g., 50-300 mg/day, clozapine may be administered at 5-2000 mg/day, e.g., 12.5 - 900 mg/day, aripirazole may be administered at 2-100 mg/day, e.g., 10-30 mg/day, ziprasidone may be administered at 2-1000 mg/day, e.g., 20-200 mg/day, quetiapine may be administered at 15-2000 mg/day, e.g., 150-700 mg/day, risperidone may be administered at 1-16, e.g., 4- 6 mg/day, remoxipride may be administered at 5-2000 mg/day, e.g., 75-600 mg/day, zotepine may be administered at 15-1000 mg/day, e.g., 150-300 mg/day, sertindole may be administered at 1-200 mg/day, e.g., 4-20 mg/day, and iloperidone may be administered at 1-100 mg/day, e.g., 2-32 mg/day. For opioid receptor antagonists, the dosage preferably ranges from 0.0001 to 1000 mg per day, e.g., at most 100 mg, 10 mg, 1 mg, 0.1 mg, 0.01 mg, or 0.001 mg. For example, naltrexone may be administered at 0.0001-500 mg/day, e.g., 25- 50 mg/day, naloxone may be administered at 0.001-100 mg/day, e.g., 0.1 to 10 mg/day, nalmefene may be administered at 0.0001-10 mg/day , e.g., 0.001-1 mg/day, butorphanol may be administered at 0.1-100 mg/day, e.g., 1-32 mg/day, dezocine may be administered at 0.1-1000 mg/day, e.g., 5-120 mg/day, nalbulphine may be administered at 1 - 1000 mg/day, e.g. , 10- 160 mg/day, and buprenorphine maybe administered at 0.01-10 mg/day* e.g., 0.3 to 1.2 mg/day. In one embodiment, 50 mg of naltrexone is administered in conjunction with 10-20 mg of olanzapine. Naltrexone may also be
administered as an extended release injectable form, e.g., Vivitrol® (380 mg gluteal IM injection), or as a subcutaneous implant, e.g., VP004 (Valera).
Other opioid receptor antagonists may be administered in similar fashion.
Furthermore, the ratio of amount of opioid receptor antagonist to SGA may be at most 1 :1, 1:10, 1:100, 1:1,000, 1 :10,000, 1:100,000, 1:1,000,000,
1 :10,000,000, 1:100,000,000, or 1:1,000,000,000. The two compounds may be administered concomitantly, either in the same or different formulations, or at different times.
The exact dosage of the compound may be dependent, for example, upon the age and weight of the recipient, the route of administration, and the severity and nature of the symptoms to be treated. Other factors that may affect the dosing include age of illness' onset; duration of illness, diagnostic subtype, severity of symptoms, dose and plasma levels of SGA, past/current substance use and smoking habits; current use of other medications; pain threshold; affective symptom severity; dietary habits, socioeconomic status; and physical activity and other life style-related factors.
In general, the dosage selected should be sufficient to prevent, ameliorate, or treat a particular indication, or one or more symptoms thereof, or effect a particular outcome without producing significant toxic or undesirable side effects. In certain embodiments, the SGA, opioid receptor antagonist, or both may be administered in an individually subtherapeutically effective amount. As noted above, the preferred route of administration for most indications is oral.
In certain embodiments, additional therapeutic compounds may be employed in the methods of the invention, such as Zolpidem tartrate, e.g., up to a maximum dose of 10 mg/day, or zaleplon, e.g., up to a maximum dose of 20 mg/day for insomnia as clinically indicated. Other examples include lorazepam for agitation at the discretion of the treating clinician.
Administration of lorazepam within six hours of the administration of rating scales is desirably avoided. In other embodiments, concomitant administration of other therapeutic compounds is not employed. For example, medications or drugs with prominent orexigenic/anorexigenic effects, e.g., anticholinergics, insulin, oral hypoglycemics, amphetamines, mood stabilizers, opioid analgesics, anti-depressants including tricyclics, SSRIs, MAO inhibitors, bupropion, and mirtazepine, may be excluded from the methods described herein.
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All publications and patent applications mentioned in this specification are herein incorporated by reference to the same extent as if each independent publication or patent application was specifically and individually indicated to be incorporated by reference.
While the invention has been described in connection with specific embodiments thereof, it will be understood that it is capable of further modifications and this application is intended to cover any variations, uses, or adaptations of the invention following, in general, the principles of the invention and including such departures from the present disclosure that come within known or customary practice within the art to which the invention pertains and may be applied to the essential features hereinbefore set forth, and follows in the scope of the appended claims.
Other embodiments are within the appended claims.
What is claimed is:

Claims

1. A method of treating a sequela of weight gain or pain insensitivity in a subject treated with a second generation antipsychotic agent (SGA), said method comprising administering an opioid receptor antagonist to said subject suffering from said sequela in an amount sufficient to treat said sequela.
2. A method of treating a psychiatric disorder, said method comprising administering a second generation antipsychotic agent (SGA) and an opioid receptor antagonist to a subject suffering from said psychiatric disorder in an amount sufficient to treat said psychiatric disorder, wherein said administration results in a reduction of a sequela of weight gain or pain insensitivity.
3. A method of treating a sequela of weight gain or pain insensitivity in a subject suffering from a psychiatric disorder, said method comprising administering a second generation antipsychotic agent (SGA) and an opioid receptor antagonist to said subject in an amount sufficient to treat said sequela or pain insensitivity.
4. The method of any of claims 1 -3 , wherein said method further comprises the step of diagnosing said sequela or pain insensitivity in said subject prior to said administering.
5. The method of any of claims 1 -3, wherein said opioid receptor antagonist comprises a μ, δ, or K opioid receptor antagonist.
6. The method of any of claims 1 -3 , wherein said opioid receptor antagonist is a partial agonist.
7. The method of claim 6, wherein said partial agonist is selected from the group consisting of butorphanol, dezocine, nalbulphine, pentazocine, and buprenorphine.
8. The method of any of claims 1 -3, wherein said opioid receptor antagonist is selected from the group consisting of diprenorphine, naloxone, naltrexone, β- chlomaltrexamine, WIN44,441-3, nalmefene, alvimopan (ADL 8-2698), methylnatrexone, cyprodime, naloxonazine, naloxazone, β- funaltrexamine, CTOP, naltrindole, ICI 174,864, 7-benzylidenenaltrexone, naltriben, nor-binaltorphimine, 5'-guanidinonaltrindole, (-)-(lR,5R,9R)-5,9- diethyl-2-(3-furylmethyl)-2-hydroxy-6,7-benzomoφhan (MR 2266), and a triethylenedioxy derivative of naltrexamine (TENA).
9. The method of any of claims 1-3, wherein said SGA is selected from the group consisting of sulpiride, amisulpride, clozapine, olanzapine, aripirazole, ziprasidone, quetiapine, risperidone, remoxipride, zotepine, sertindole, and iloperidone.
10. The method of claim 1, wherein said subject is suffering from a psychiatric disorder.
1 l. The method of any of claims 2, 3, or 10, wherein said psychiatric disorder is selected from the group consisting of schizophrenia, autism, psychosis, schizoaffective disorder, mood disorders, anxiety disorders, dementia, sleep disorders, eating disorders, drug or alcohol abuse and dependence, impulse control disorders, personality disorders, and neuropathic pain.
12. The method of any of claims 1-3, wherein said sequela is selected from the group consisting of weight gain, obesity, metabolic syndrome, insulin resistance, abdominal adiposity, impaired, glucose tolerance, dyslipidaemia, hypercholesterolemia, diabetes, and hypertension.
13. The method of any of claims 1-3, wherein said opioid receptor antagonist is administered at less than 10 mg per day.
14. The method of claim 13, wherein said opioid receptor antagonist is administered at less than 1 mg, 0.1 mg, 0.01 mg, or 0.001 mg per day.
15. The method of any of claims 1-3, wherein the ratio of opioid receptor antagonist to SGA is at most 1: 1,000.
16. The method of any of claims 1-3, wherein said subject has a BMI of greater tthhaann oorr eeqquuaall ttoo 3300 kkgg//mm2 oorr ggrreeaatteerr than or equal to 27 kg/m and at least one symptom of metabolic syndrome.
17. The method of any of claiml-3, wherein said subject has a BMI of less than 30 kg/m2 and said subject has increased pain sensitivity.
18. A method of determining the efficacy of treatment with an SGA and an opioid receptor antagonist, said method comprising determining the pain sensitivity of a subject having been administered an SGA and an opioid receptor antagonist, wherein an increase in the level of pain sensitivity after administration of said SGA and opioid receptor antagonist is indicative of therapeutic efficacy.
19. A method for determining a propensity for a subject to gain weight from SGA treatment, said method comprising determining the pain sensitivity of a subject, wherein a decreased level of pain sensitivity compared to a healthy control is indicative of the propensity for said subject to gain weight from SGA treatment.
20. The method of claim 19, wherein said subject has said decreased level of pain sensitivity and said method further comprises administering an SGA and an opioid receptor antagonist in an amount effective to treat a sequela of weight gain.
21. A pharmaceutical composition comprising (i) a second generation antipsychotic agent (SGA) and (ii) an opioid antagonist.
22. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 21 , wherein said opioid antagonist is present in an amount effective to reduce a sequela of weight gain or pain insensitivity.
23. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 21, wherein said opioid receptor antagonist is present at less than 1 mg, 0.1 mg, 0.01 mg, or 0.001 mg.
24. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 21, wherein the ratio of opioid receptor antagonist to SGA is at most 1 :1,000.
25. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 21, wherein said SGA is present in a subtherapeutically effective amount.
26. A kit comprising (i) a second generation antipsychotic agent (SGA) and (ii) an opioid antagonist.
27. The kit of claim 26, wherein said opioid receptor antagonist is present at less than 1 mg, 0.1 mg, 0.01 mg, or 0.001 mg.
28. The kit of claim 26, wherein the ratio of opioid receptor antagonist to SGA is at most 1 :1,000.
29. The kit of claim 26, wherein said SGA is present in a
subtherapeutically effective amount.
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