2023
DOI: 10.1124/jpet.122.001419
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3,4-Methylenedioxypyrovalerone High-Responder Phenotype as a Tool to Evaluate Candidate Medications for Stimulant Use Disorder

Abstract: Despite decades of research, there are no medications approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration to treat stimulant use disorders. Self-administration procedures are widely used to screen candidate medications for stimulant use disorder, though preclinical reductions in stimulant self-administration have not translated to meaningful reductions in stimulant use in humans. One possible reason for this discordance is that most preclinical studies evaluate candidate medications under conditions tha… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(4 citation statements)
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References 55 publications
(80 reference statements)
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“…Consistent with previous studies reporting unusually high levels of drug-taking in male and female rats that self-administer MDPV, rats that self-administered MDPV had a more severe SUD-like phenotype score than rats that self-administered cocaine, regardless of access condition or duration of self-administration. This was primarily due to the increase in infusions earned, responses made during the pre-session time out, and responses made when drug was signaled to be unavailable, replicating and extending our previous studies with high-responder rats [25][26][27][28][29]. Given that sensitivity to punishment frequently contributes to severe SUD-like phenotype [3,4,[6][7][8] and considering some rats that selfadministered MDPV had very high punishment scores, it was somewhat unexpected that rats that self-administered cocaine or MDPV did not differ with regard to the punishment endpoint.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 81%
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“…Consistent with previous studies reporting unusually high levels of drug-taking in male and female rats that self-administer MDPV, rats that self-administered MDPV had a more severe SUD-like phenotype score than rats that self-administered cocaine, regardless of access condition or duration of self-administration. This was primarily due to the increase in infusions earned, responses made during the pre-session time out, and responses made when drug was signaled to be unavailable, replicating and extending our previous studies with high-responder rats [25][26][27][28][29]. Given that sensitivity to punishment frequently contributes to severe SUD-like phenotype [3,4,[6][7][8] and considering some rats that selfadministered MDPV had very high punishment scores, it was somewhat unexpected that rats that self-administered cocaine or MDPV did not differ with regard to the punishment endpoint.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 81%
“…Studying rats with more extreme phenotypes may provide a more translational framework to understand factors that underlie the transition from regular to disordered patterns of substance use. Though a relatively small subset of rats (17-22%) develop the most severe SUD-like phenotype when they are allowed to self-administer cocaine [3,8], a much larger proportion of rats (~30-40%) engage in aberrantly high levels of drug-taking when MDPV is available for self-administration [25][26][27][28][29]. Thus, the primary goals of the current studies were to directly compare the SUD-like phenotype in male and female rats self-administering MDPV or cocaine, and to determine how manipulating access condition (short-, long-, and intermittent-access) impacted these SUD-like phenotypes.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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