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Popular Crystal Meth Addiction Treatment Ineffective

A recent study has found that PROMETAT, a popular but controversial treatment for crystal meth addiction, is no more effective than placebo in reducing crystal meth use, keeping users in treatment, or reducing cravings for crystal meth.

Methamphetamine, also known as meth, crystal meth, or ice, is the second most abused illicit drug in the world (cannabis is first), with 15-16 million regular users. The United States saw a rapid growth in crystal meth addiction in the early 2000s. It was during that epidemic that PROMETAT burst onto the public scene through an aggressive marketing campaign.

Crystal Meth

Popular Crystal Meth Addiction Treatment Ineffective

Since its introduction, the PROMETAT protocol has been widely used in specialized private clinics in the U.S. as a treatment for crystal meth addiction without going through the normal drug approval process. Normally, introducing a new medication requires approval by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, including tests of product safety and a clinical trial to make sure the treatment produces the predicted effects. A loophole in this regulatory system allows a combination of previously approved medications to be marketed without review, whether or not the individual medications were originally approved as a treatment for the condition the new protocol targets. The manufacturer of PROMETAT was therefore able to market and sell the new protocol with no federal review or clinical trial evidence.

Private patients reportedly pay $12,000 to $15,000 for one month of treatment.

The manufacturer used some of its profits to fund the clinical trials long called for by the scientific community, including this one. The researchers found that the group of participants given the PROMETAT treatment did not have better outcomes than those given placebo in terms of reducing crystal meth use, retention in treatment, or reducing crystal meth cravings.

Reference for: Popular Crystal Meth Addiction Treatment Ineffective