ASSESSMENT OF POTENTIAL SUBSTANCE ABUSE TREATMENT MEDICATIONS IN NONHUMAN PRIMATE MODELS. NIDA REF. NO. N01DA-19-8946; POP: 12/16/2018-12/15/2020.

NIH RePORTER · NIH · N01 · $1,299,418 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Abstract: The main objectives of this project are to determine the effects of compounds using two well-established paradigms: (1) drug discrimination and (2) self-administration. Two distinct experimental protocols, pretreatment and substitution, may be conducted within each paradigm. In the drug discrimination paradigm, male rhesus monkeys will be trained to discriminate an intramuscular injection of cocaine from saline. Subsequently, coded compounds will be studied by determining whether selected doses, administered pre-session, reduce the discriminative-stimulus effects of cocaine (pretreatment) and/or whether selective doses of the compound itself can produce cocaine-like effects (substitution). In the drug self-administration paradigm, Mm will be prepared with indwelling IV catheters, and trained to self-administer IV cocain in daily sessions that also include food self-administration components. Each coded compound will be tested in Mm in which the dose-response function for IV cocaine self-administration has been determined. In the pretreatment protocol, tests will be conducted, first, to identify a pretreatment dose that reduces self-administration of the peak reinforcing unit dose of IV cocaine without greatly altering food self-administration, and second, to determine how that dose alters the cocaine dose response function for IV self-administration. In the substitution protocol, selected unit doses of the coded compound will be made available of IV self-administration to evaluate their reinforcing effects. Follow-up studies may be conducted with promising compounds.

Key facts

NIH application ID
10285326
Project number
75N95019C00007-P00003-9999-2
Recipient
MCLEAN HOSPITAL
Principal Investigator
JACK BERGMAN
Activity code
N01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$1,299,418
Award type
Project period
2018-12-16 → 2020-12-15