Waeiss, Robert A.Knight, Christopher P.Hauser, Sheketha R.Pratt, Lauren A.McBride, William J.Rodd, Zachary A.2020-10-122020-10-122019-02-13Waeiss, R. A., Knight, C. P., Hauser, S. R., Pratt, L. A., McBride, W. J., & Rodd, Z. A. (2019). Therapeutic challenges for concurrent ethanol and nicotine consumption: Naltrexone and varenicline fail to alter simultaneous ethanol and nicotine intake by female alcohol-preferring (P) rats. Psychopharmacology, 236(6), 1887–1900. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00213-019-5174-y1432-2072https://hdl.handle.net/1805/24055Rationale and Objectives: Simultaneous alcohol and nicotine consumption occurs in the majority of individuals with alcohol use disorder (AUD) and nicotine dependence. Varenicline (Var) is used to assist in the cessation of nicotine use, while naltrexone (Nal) is the standard treatment for AUD. Despite evidence that ethanol (EtOH) and nicotine (NIC) co-use produces unique neuroadaptations, preclinical research has focused on the effects of pharmacotherapeutics on a single reinforcer. The current experiments examined the effects of Var and Nal on EtOH, NIC, or EtOH+NIC intake. Methods: Animals were randomly assigned to 1 of 4 drinking conditions of 24-hour access to a 3-bottle choice paradigm, one of which always contained water. Drinking conditions were water only, 0.07 and 0.14 mg/mL NIC (NIC only), 15% and 30% EtOH (EtOH only), or 15% and 30% EtOH with 0.14 mg/mL NIC (EtOH+NIC). The effects of Var (0, 1, or 2 mg/kg) or Nal (0, 1, or 10 mg/kg) injections on maintenance and relapse consumption were determined during 4 consecutive days. Results: Var reduced maintenance and relapse NIC intake but had no effect on EtOH or EtOH+NIC drinking. Conversely, Nal reduced EtOH maintenance and relapse drinking, but had no effect on NIC or EtOH+NIC drinking. Discussion: The results indicate the standard pharmacological treatments for nicotine dependence and AUD were effective at reducing consumption of the targeted reinforcer but neither reduced EtOH+NIC couse/abuse. These findings suggest that co-abuse may promote unique neuroadaptations that require models of polysubstance abuse to develop pharmacotherapeutics to treat AUD and nicotine dependence.en-USAlcohol-preferring (P) ratsalcoholethanolnicotineco-abusevareniclinenaltrexonemaintenancerelapseaddictionTherapeutic challenges for concurrent ethanol and nicotine consumption: naltrexone and varenicline fail to alter simultaneous ethanol and nicotine intake by female alcohol-preferring (P) ratsArticle