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| type | title | author | url | date | domain | secondary_domains | format | status | priority | tags | intake_tier | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| source | Off-Label GLP-1 Medications Help Treat Alcohol Use Disorder — Psychiatric News (APA) | Psychiatric News (American Psychiatric Association) | https://www.psychiatryonline.org/doi/10.1176/appi.pn.2026.02.2.18 | 2026-02-01 | health | article | unprocessed | medium |
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Content
Published in Psychiatric News (APA's news publication), February 2026.
Core content (from search summary):
- Clinical recommendations: continue prescribing naltrexone or acamprosate as FIRST-LINE AUD treatments
- Reserve GLP-1 RAs for patients who have COMORBID METABOLIC DISEASE and are NON-RESPONSIVE to standard treatments
- Some psychiatrists have prescribed GLP-1 RAs for more than 60 patients, helping estimated 60-70% significantly reduce alcohol and nicotine consumption
- The 41.1% reduction in heavy drinking days (NNT 4.3, semaglutide + CBT, JAMA Psychiatry 2025) is cited as the key efficacy data
- GLP-1 RAs noted for managing metabolic side effects in schizophrenia/serious mental illness patients on antipsychotics
This is the CLOSEST thing to an APA position on GLP-1 for AUD available as of Feb 2026:
- NOT a formal clinical practice guideline
- Psychiatric News is APA's news publication, not a practice guideline document
- Framing: off-label, second-line, for metabolically comorbid patients — CONSERVATIVE
- First-line remains naltrexone/acamprosate
Key implication for competency gap: APA's publication recommends second-line use with metabolic comorbidity requirement — much more conservative than JAMA Psychiatry evidence (AUD + obesity only, NNT 4.3) or Osmind advocacy. The conservative framing may limit uptake even among psychiatrists who read APA publications.
Agent Notes
Why this matters: This is the APA publication's de facto position on GLP-1 for AUD as of February 2026. The conservative framing (second-line, metabolic comorbidity required) contrasts with the JAMA Psychiatry evidence showing superior NNT vs. current first-line agents. This gap between evidence and APA-adjacent guidance is a Belief 3 instance — structural conservatism in prescribing recommendations relative to clinical evidence.
What surprised me: The 60-70% response rate from individual psychiatrists who have prescribed GLP-1 for >60 patients is striking anecdotal evidence. This is not from a trial — it's from prescribing experience. But 60-70% response is a very large signal in addiction medicine, where response rates are typically 30-50%.
What I expected but didn't find: A statement about anhedonia risk, dose management, or psychiatric monitoring protocol. The APA-adjacent guidance doesn't engage with the anhedonia concern at all — focusing only on efficacy.
KB connections:
- prescription digital therapeutics failed as a business model because FDA clearance creates regulatory cost without the pricing power — the second-line/off-label framing limits prescribing even when evidence supports first-line use
- value-based care transitions stall at the payment boundary — the metabolic comorbidity requirement for coverage further restricts access for purely psychiatric indications
Extraction hints:
- Claim: "APA-adjacent guidance recommends GLP-1 as second-line AUD treatment requiring metabolic comorbidity — more conservative than JAMA Psychiatry RCT evidence suggests — reflecting evidence-to-guideline lag in addiction psychiatry"
- The 60-70% response rate from individual prescribers is anecdotal but notable — may be worth a musing flag for future characterization
Curator Notes (structured handoff for extractor)
PRIMARY CONNECTION: the mental health supply gap is widening not closing because demand outpaces workforce growth and technology primarily serves the already-served rather than expanding access WHY ARCHIVED: Documents the gap between clinical evidence (NNT 4.3) and APA-adjacent guidance (second-line, comorbidity required). Evidence-to-practice lag in addiction psychiatry. EXTRACTION HINT: Most valuable as a comparative claim — pair with JAMA Psychiatry AUD RCT evidence to make the evidence-to-guideline gap explicit and measurable.