The Scotsman

Pill could help drink cravings

- By ELIZABETH ANDERSON

A pill designed to suppress alcohol cravings could help people who drink most nights but do not realise they have a problem.

Called Arbaclofen Placarbil, the medication is about to reach the final stages of testing and could hit the market in 2020. It works by creating a buzz greater than that felt by people when they have an alcoholic drink.

The pill is being developed by FTSE 250-listed company Indivior.

A pill to stop alcohol cravings could help people who drink most nights but do not realise they may have a problem.

Scientists in Hull are reaching the final stages of testing the pill, which could hit the market in 2020.

The drug, which is being created by FTSE 250-listed company Indivior, works by surpassing the buzz that people feel when they have an alcoholic drink.

The pill – called Arbaclofen Placarbil – will help alcoholics get their drinking under control.

But Indivior is aiming the pill at people who have a few glasses of wine every night and may not recognise they have a problem with alcohol dependency.

An estimated 124 million people across the world are thought to be alcohol dependent.

Health officials have warned repeatedly that many middle-class profession­als are in denial about their alcohol consumptio­n.

Pharmaceut­ical companies have to go through three stages of extensive trials before they can apply for regulatory approval.

Companies typically apply for approval in the US, which makes it easier to win approval in other countries.

Indivior is well into the phase two stage.

In its financial report, the company said its latest round of tests in the US proved the product was “safe and well tolerated in a controlled abstinence setting” when given in doses of 240mg.

However, there was significan­t variabilit­y between individual­s when the dosage was increased and it is now developing a new formula.

The appeal of Arbaclofen Placarbil is that people do not have to cut out drinking altogether and do not have to go through a detox before taking it.

There is no product like this on the market. The only option for alcoholics at the moment is to take a drug that makes them sick, which has the effect of taking away any pleasure they get from drinking.

Indivior was spun out of Nurofen owner Reckitt Benckiser in late 2014. The company, which employs more than 50 specialist scientists at its research and developmen­t unit in Hull, also makes addiction-control products for people who take heroin or cocaine.

A spokesman for Indivior declined to comment.

NHS guidelines recommend that both men and women do not drink more than 14 units of alcohol a week – the equivalent of around nine small glasses of wine – and have several alcohol-free days each week.

 ??  ?? 0 Guidelines recommend you do not drink more than 14 units a week – the equivalent of around nine small glasses of wine
0 Guidelines recommend you do not drink more than 14 units a week – the equivalent of around nine small glasses of wine

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