Bromocriptine and cocaine cue reactivity in cocaine‐dependent patients

Abstract
Based on previous reports that bromocriptine, a postsynaptic dopamine agonist, reduced cocaine craving and prevented relapse in cocaine-dependent subjects, effects of the drug were evaluated in 20 cocaine-dependent males in an inpatient drug rehabilitation programme. The subjective and physiologic effects of exposure to both cocaine-associated and neutral stimuli, presented using videotapes, were measured at one-week intervals. Between laboratory sessions subjects received either bromocriptine (1.25 mg bid) or a matched placebo, administered in double-blind fashion. Compared with the neutral videotape, the cocaine videotape elicited both a greater desire to use cocaine and more symptoms associated with cocaine self-administration. These results support an appetitive conditioning model of cocaine effects. Bromocriptine, however, had no effect on the cocaine-cue-associated reactivity, which declined over the 1-week interval in both treatment groups. Methodological differences among studies that have examined the effects of bromocriptine in cocaine-dependent subjects may explain the variable findings observed.