2023-10-26 05:53:00
This project won a prize of 500,000 euros last week from the pharmaceutical company Eurofarma intended to finance innovative solutions with “high impact” in the health sector.
This is not a miracle anti-cocaine recipe intended for the entire population. Unlike preventive vaccines, which aim to prevent diseases from reaching the body, therapeutic vaccines are used to treat existing health problems.
Calixcoca “helps addicted people to produce antibodies that prevent the drug from acting on the brain,” explains psychiatrist Frederico Garcia, coordinator of this project led by the Federal University of Minas Gerais (UFMG).
Concretely, this vaccine aims to block the sensation of pleasure that cocaine arouses when it acts on an area of the brain known as the “reward circuit”.
By interrupting this cycle which leads to compulsive consumption, and therefore to addiction, it “increases the chances” of prolonging the abstinence of those who wish to quit, explains the researcher.
In animal tests, scientists observed significant production of these anti-addiction antibodies, and few side effects.
The vaccine also had positive effects on mouse fetuses. This might contribute to the treatment of pregnant women suffering from addiction problems to cocaine or its derivatives, such as crack.
Other similar research projects were carried out in the United States but were unsuccessful due, among other things, to insufficient results during clinical tests on humans, which are due to begin soon in Brazil.
“Not a panacea”
“Calixcoca” is the first project of this type in Latin America. “If clinical tests show that it is effective, and if it is approved by the health regulator Anvisa, it will be the first anti-cocaine and even anti-drug vaccine in the world used as medicine,” assures Frederico Garcia.
Unlike other vaccines which use biological components, the antigen, the substance which triggers the immune reaction to produce antibodies, is made from chemical components designed in the laboratory. With two advantages: manufacturing costs less and it is not necessary to respect the cold chain for transport.
“There is still no specific approved (drug) treatment to combat cocaine or crack addiction. Today, patients are offered psychological monitoring, social assistance and possibly detoxification cures,” explains the psychiatrist.
The vaccine would be a complement to these multidisciplinary strategies, helping for example to avoid immediate relapses following a stay in treatment.
Even if clinical tests prove conclusive, it is “not a panacea”: “Calixcoca” is intended for patients “in abstinence who are determined to remain so”, he emphasizes.
Frederico Garcia’s team hopes to help reverse the trend of a “sad statistic”.
According to data from the United States National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), one in four regular cocaine users becomes addicted. And only a quarter of patients wishing to free themselves from this addiction succeed following five years of treatment.
Expectations around “Calixcoca” are high in Brazil, the second country where the most cocaine is consumed in the world following the United States: more than 3,000 people have already volunteered for clinical tests.
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