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Emapunil: possible new nonaddictive anti-anxiety drug

Emapunil, aka AC-5216 & XBD-173
From the Corpus Callosum blog: Those of us who watch the drug development pipeline have been pining for a nonaddictive anti-anxiety drug. Occasionally there are glimmers of hope. One candidate is emapunil, aka XBD-173 or AC-5216. In 2004, there was an article in the British Journal of Pharmacology about this. That article described promising findings, in rats and mice. Now, there is an article in Science that finally show some findings in humans. The abstract of the Science article follows...

Translocator Protein (18 kD) as Target for Anxiolytics Without Benzodiazepine-Like Side Effects: Science 24 July 2009: Vol. 325. no. 5939, pp. 490 - 493

Most antianxiety drugs (anxiolytics) work by modulating neurotransmitters in the brain. Benzodiazepines are fast and effective anxiolytic drugs; however, their long-term use is limited by the development of tolerance and withdrawal symptoms. Ligands of the translocator protein [18 kilodaltons (kD)] may promote the synthesis of endogenous neurosteroids, which also exert anxiolytic effects in animal models. Here, we found that the translocator protein (18 kD) ligand XBD173 enhanced {gamma}-aminobutyric acid-mediated neurotransmission and counteracted induced panic attacks in rodents in the absence of sedation and tolerance development. XBD173 also exerted antipanic activity in humans and, in contrast to benzodiazepines, did not cause sedation or withdrawal symptoms. Thus, translocator protein (18 kD) ligands are promising candidates for fast-acting anxiolytic drugs with less severe side effects than benzodiazepines.

Read the full post for more details from human trials and a history of research into emapunil.

Thanks TJ!

Posted By jamesk at 2010-01-11 12:11:24 permalink | comments
Tags: anxiolytics research emapunil
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guest : 2011-02-23 08:44:44
I would imagine that if indeed this is a "better" medication for anxiety in that it is less sedating and non-addictive that it would not be in the interest of anyone in the field of mental illness to release such a "magic pill." After all, with current benzos mental health practitioners get the best of the both worlds, they get to prescribe them, and then if there is a problem, they get to refer to addiction rehab centers and the cycle goes on and on... Pardon my cynicism, but it just seems like "the best medication" is not necessarily the best for business of "mental health"...
Jenny Story. : 2010-08-28 04:28:17
Emapunil was tested on rats, then on seventy healthy males for one week, finally against alprazolam. Results indicated it was a rapid acting anxiolytic for panic induced by CCK-4 (an endogenous anxiety inducing molecule to which panic disorder patients are unusually sensitive) without tolerance or sedation, unlike the case with BZDs (Rupprecht et. al. 2009). However, critical evaluation of the comparison of the efficacy of emapunil against alprazolam reveals some flaws: Alprazolam was given at 2 mg/day an unusually high starting dose, so the high incidence of clinical effects like sedation or withdrawal is not representative of the profile of alprazolam in normal clinical practice (Australian Medicines Handbook 2010).


Further, in a trial on seventy healthy subjects for a week, the absence of signs of dependency does not indicate lack of potential for abuse of dependence longer term. A moot case is that of the opioid nasal spray butorphanol for migraine, initially unscheduled but reclassified at the maker’s request to US S4 - Australian S8, because of addiction incidence. It takes a while for the ADR reports to mount on experimental drugs.

The drug trial was sponsored by the manufacturer Novartis (Hirschler 2009), so a degree of cynicism about claims is merited. Independence of studies about experimental drugs is a moot point for all the experimental drugs.

Will the drug ever hit the shelf? The rumour on the science blogsites is that the patent has been bought by a Japanese pharmaceutical giant, with no intention to market.....

Anxious. : 2010-02-18 15:28:38
Anxiety is a common problem in today's society, that is why he draws the people to be very careful with the medicines they take for anxiety that can accrue from a common chronic pain, it is important that people know the importance that these drugs can cause anxiety and lead, according to a report that indicates that anxiety disorders are very common chronic anxiety with medication, especially in developed countries like Europe and United States of America.
Source :findrxonline
Bambinn. : 2010-01-24 12:30:54
will this be available?

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