JOURNAL OF CHILD AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY
Volume 15, Number 5, 2005
Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.
Pp. 723–728
Naltrexone Treatment of Adolescent Alcoholics:
An Open-Label Pilot Study
Deborah Deas, M.D.,1 M.P.H., Kim May, Ph.D.,2 Carrie Randall, Ph.D.,1
Natalie Johnson, M.A.,1 and Raymond Anton, M.D.1
ABSTRACT
Objective: This 6-week open-label trial of naltrexone was conducted in a preliminary fashion
to determine whether naltrexone would be safe, well tolerated, and lead to a reduction in alcohol
consumption in adolescents with alcohol dependence.
Method: Five outpatient treatment-seeking adolescents who met Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th edition (DSM-IV) criteria for alcohol dependence were recruited.
The Child Schedule for Schizophrenia and Affective Disorders (K-SADS), Structured
Clinical Interview for DSM (SCID), and the Family History Questionnaire were administered
at baseline. The Time-Line Follow-Back (TLFB) and two craving scales (Adolescent Obsessive
Compulsive Drinking Scale [A-OCDS] and a craving analog scale) were administered
at baseline and weekly thereafter. Each subject received a 10-day supply of naltrexone (50 mg)
and a 100-mg riboflavin capsule. Subjects were instructed to take naltrexone and riboflavin
simultaneously.
Results: Overall, the average drinks per drinking day (DDD) decreased significantly from
baseline to the end of week 6 with an average reduction of 7.61 standard drinks. There was a
significant reduction in the average A-OCDS total score, A-OCDS Irresistibility subscale score,
and craving analog score. Nausea was the only side-effect reported, and there were no elevations
of liver enzymes. Naltrexone was well tolerated by the alcohol-dependent adolescent.
Conclusions: Our data suggest that naltrexone is safe and well tolerated in adolescent alcoholics.
Naltrexone may lead to a significant reduction in alcohol consumption and craving in
adolescent alcoholics, but larger, randomized, controlled trials are needed.


These cases would seem to lend some credence to our theory concerning length of addiction affecting time to cure. I have the full PDF if anyone wants it.