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Effects of acute and chronic aripiprazole treatment on choice between cocaine self-administration and food under a concurrent schedule of reinforcement in rats
Authors:Morgane Thomsen  Anders Fink-Jensen  David P. D. Woldbye  Gitta Wörtwein  Thomas N. Sager  Rene Holm  Lauren M. Pepe  S. Barak Caine
Affiliation:(1) Alcohol and Drug Abuse Research Center, McLean Hospital/Harvard Medical School, 115 Mill Street, Belmont, MA 02478, USA;(2) Laboratory of Neuropsychiatry, Rigshospitalet University Hospital, 9 Blegdamsvej, 2100 Copenhagen, Denmark;(3) Department of Neuroscience and Pharmacology, University of Copenhagen, 9 Blegdamsvej, 2100 Copenhagen, Denmark;(4) Division of Neurobiology, H. Lundbeck A/S, 9 Ottiliavej, 2500 Valby, Denmark;(5) Preformulation, H. Lundbeck A/S, 9 Ottiliavej, 2500 Valby, Denmark
Abstract:Rationale  Dopamine D2-like partial agonists such as aripiprazole have received some attention as potential pharmacotherapies for the treatment of psychostimulant addiction. However, the preclinical evaluations so far have focused on acute effects of aripiprazole. Objectives  We tested the hypothesis that aripiprazole, both as acute and as chronic treatment, would preferentially decrease cocaine self-administration while sparing behavior maintained by a natural reinforcer, resulting in a shift in the allocation of behavior from cocaine-taking towards the alternative reinforcer. Materials and methods  Rats were trained to self-administer intravenous cocaine in a concurrent choice procedure, with a palatable food as the competing reinforcer, under a fixed ratio (FR) 1 FR 5 chain schedule. Aripiprazole was then administered as continuous infusion by osmotic minipumps for 5 days, during which performance in the choice procedure was assessed daily. Results  An intermediate dose of aripiprazole decreased cocaine self-administration and shifted the cocaine choice curve to the right as an acute treatment. However, as a chronic treatment, aripiprazole failed to decrease cocaine self-administration or cocaine choice, despite a dose-dependent decrease in overall response rates and food-maintained behavior. Conclusions  Our results confirm and extend earlier findings and indicate that acute administration of aripiprazole can decrease cocaine self-administration. However, based on the present data, chronic treatment with aripiprazole does not show much promise as a potential pharmacotherapy for cocaine addiction. Both acute and chronic treatment data are in agreement with published clinical findings, suggesting that the concurrent choice procedure in rats has predictive validity of efficacy in humans.
Keywords:Self-administration  Cocaine  Concurrent choice schedule  Chronic treatment  Partial agonist
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