2015
DOI: 10.1124/jpet.115.228833
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Lorcaserin Reduces the Discriminative Stimulus and Reinforcing Effects of Cocaine in Rhesus Monkeys

Abstract: Cocaine abuse and obesity are serious public health problems, and studies suggest that both dopamine and serotonin systems are involved in regulating the consumption of drugs and food. Lorcaserin has serotonin (5-HT) 2C receptor agonist actions, is approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for treating obesity, and might be effective for treating cocaine abuse. These studies characterized the pharmacokinetic and behavioral profiles of lorcaserin (intragastric administration) and determined the effectiv… Show more

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Cited by 54 publications
(91 citation statements)
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“…This finding has clear clinical implications, as it suggests that increased nicotine use appears unlikely to overcome lorcaserin’s treatment effects. Moreover, decreases in nicotine-maintained responding were generally consistent over 3 – 5 days of continuous treatment with lorcaserin and these findings are consistent with previous reports showing that orally-administered lorcaserin reliably decreased cocaine self-administration over a 14-day treatment period in rhesus monkeys (Collins et al, 2016) and suggest that tolerance does not develop rapidly to the desired treatment effects of lorcaserin. However, studies in which high daily dosages of lorcaserin are administered over extended time periods (e.g., months) are necessary for a full evaluation of whether and at what rate tolerance may develop to lorcaserin’s effects.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
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“…This finding has clear clinical implications, as it suggests that increased nicotine use appears unlikely to overcome lorcaserin’s treatment effects. Moreover, decreases in nicotine-maintained responding were generally consistent over 3 – 5 days of continuous treatment with lorcaserin and these findings are consistent with previous reports showing that orally-administered lorcaserin reliably decreased cocaine self-administration over a 14-day treatment period in rhesus monkeys (Collins et al, 2016) and suggest that tolerance does not develop rapidly to the desired treatment effects of lorcaserin. However, studies in which high daily dosages of lorcaserin are administered over extended time periods (e.g., months) are necessary for a full evaluation of whether and at what rate tolerance may develop to lorcaserin’s effects.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…It is unclear whether the different effects of lorcaserin on food-maintained behavior in the two experiments were due to differences in dosing regimen (acute bolus dose vs. continuous accumulating dosage) or differences in response requirement (FR5 vs. FR1 in, respectively, acute and continuous dosing studies). Some reduction in food-maintained responding is perhaps not surprising in view of lorcaserin’s FDA-approval as a weight loss medication and, as well, previous reports of decreases in feeding or food-reinforced behavior in rats (Higgins et al, 2012; Thomsen et al, 2008) and monkeys (Collins et al, 2016). Indeed, more pronounced effects of lorcaserin on food-maintained responding might have been expected in the present experiments.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 86%
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“…Third, we tested the effects of the serotonin 5-HT 2C receptor agonist lorcaserin (Smith et al 2008), which is prescribed as a treatment for obesity, but might have anti-addiction effects since it can decrease self-administration of nicotine (Briggs et al 2016; Cousins et al 2014; Higgins et al 2013; Higgins et al 2012; Levin et al 2011), cocaine (Collins et al 2016; Harvey-Lewis et al 2016), methamphetamine (Gerak et al 2016) and oxycodone (Neelakantan et al 2017) in rats. With respect to choice behavior and opioid self-administration, agonists of 5-HT 2C are also interesting because they decrease premature operant responding that is considered a form of impulsivity (Higgins et al 2012; Navarra et al 2008), and they block some effects of opioid administration and withdrawal (Wu et al 2015; Zhang et al 2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%