UK Health Radio – Medical News Update On the Hour -
Drug to Combat Alcohol Dependence
The BBC has reported that a pill designed to reduce
alcohol consumption among problem drinkers looks set to be made available to
NHS patients in England and Wales.
Nalmefene should be made available to people who
regularly drink high amounts of alcohol, the National Institute for Health and
Care Excellence (NICE) said.
Costing just over £3 a tablet, it is already
prescribed in Scotland.
Final guidance is set to be published next month
and NICE says 600,000 people would be eligible for the drug.
Nalmefene, which is also called Selincro, is taken
as a tablet once a day and reduces the urge to drink alcohol. The drug is
licensed for use along with psychosocial support.
If it receives final approval, it will be made
available on the NHS in England and Wales. Northern Ireland will review this
final guidance before making a decision.
Prof Carole Longson, NICE Health Technology
Evaluation Centre director, said alcohol dependence was a serious issue for
many people.
"Those who could be prescribed nalmefene have
already taken the first big steps by visiting their doctor, engaging with
support services and taking part in therapy programmes," she said.
"When used alongside psychosocial support
nalmefene is clinically and cost effective for the NHS compared with
psychosocial support alone."
The World Health Organization defines high alcohol
consumption as drinking more than 7.5 units per day for men and more than 5
units per day for women.
For men, that is three pints of beer or cider at 5%
strength. For women, two pints of similar strength alcohol would put them into
the high consumption category.
Prof Matt Field, Professor of Addiction at
Liverpool University, said the effectiveness of nalmefene was controversial.
"All of the clinical trial data are from
people who were motivated to reduce their drinking," he said.
"It simply hasn't been tested on people who
are not interested in reducing their alcohol consumption and most clinicians believe
that no treatment can be effective unless people are motivated to change."
Amanda Thomas
UK Health Radio – Medical
News Update On the Hour
Kindly sponsored by
1-stop-health-shop.com
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