KUMJ | VOL. 23 | NO. 3 | ISSUE 91 | JULY-SEPTEMBER, 2025
Comparative Study of Different Anti Craving Medication for Alcohol Dependence and Their Effect on Relapse Rate
Kunwar D, Risal A
Abstract: Background
Alcohol use disorder is a chronic medical condition with a multifactorial aetiology.
Food and drug administration approved treatment options for alcohol dependence
syndrome includes: Naltrexone, Acamprosate, and Disulfiram and Topiramate as an
off label drug. The lack of data specific to the Nepalese population pose significant
challenges.
Objective
To fill that gap by assessing the effectiveness of Naltrexone, Disulfiram, Topiramate
and Acamprosate in relapse prevention
Method
Hospital based cohort study conducted over a period of two months. The total 128
participants were divided into four groups randomly. Patients in the Naltrexone
group were prescribed a 50 mg tablet once daily, patients in Topiramate group was
given 25 mg up to 100 mg. Acamprosate group, 333 mg one tablet three times a
day was given and Disulfiram group received 250 mg once a day and followed up for
four weeks. The association between alcohol consumption and sociodemographic
characteristics was assessed using Chi-square test. The Statistical Package for Social
Science software (IBM SPSS Statistics 21, Chicago, USA) was used for analysis.
Result
Out of 128 participants 23.4% relapsed in 12 weeks follow up. Naltrexone, Topiramate,
Disulfiram, and Acamprosate all were equally effective in preventing relapse and
there was no statistically significant differences identified among these medications
regarding relapse prevention in our study.
Conclusion
This study contributes important new data on the efficacy of Acamprosate in the
treatment of alcohol dependence in Nepalese population. The study also support for
use of pharmacotherapy for relapse prevention.
Keyword : Alcohol dependence, Anti-craving drugs, Relapse prevention