clinical identity

A chronic, relapsing disorder characterized by compulsive alcohol use, loss of control, and negative emotional states when not using. Management has shifted from “abstinence only” to patient-centered goals (reduction vs. abstinence) using the 2023 CMAJ Guidelines.

screening & diagnosis

  • Screening:
    • SASQ (Single Alcohol Screening Question): “How many times in the past year have you had 5 (men) or 4 (women) drinks in a day?” ( is positive).
    • AUDIT-C: Scored 0–12. indicates at-risk drinking.
  • Diagnosis (DSM-5-TR):
    • Requires of 11 criteria in 12 months (e.g., tolerance, withdrawal, craving, social repercussion, failure to cut down).
    • Severity: Mild (2–3), Moderate (4–5), Severe ().

management framework

  1. Determine Goal: Abstinence vs. Harm Reduction (reduced consumption).
  2. Withdrawal Risk: Screen with PAWSS. If high risk, manage withdrawal first.
  3. Psychosocial: CBT, family therapy, and culturally safe care (especially for Indigenous populations) are standard of care.
  4. Pharmacotherapy: Offer to all patients with moderate-severe AUD.

pharmacotherapy

first-line agents

drugNaltrexoneAcamprosate
mechanism-opioid antagonist. Blocks endogenous opioids released by alcohol (reduces “buzz”/reward).Modulates NMDA (glutamate) & GABA systems. Restores excitatory/inhibitory balance.
best forReducing heavy drinking days and cravings. Effective even if patient is not fully abstinent.Maintaining abstinence.
dosing25 mg PO daily x 3d 50 mg PO daily.666 mg (2 tabs) PO TID.
key contraindicationsCurrent Opioid Use (precipitates withdrawal).
Acute Hepatitis/Liver Failure.
Severe Renal Impairment (CrCl mL/min).
common seNausea (transient), headache, dizziness.Diarrhea, bloating.
exam pearlMust be opioid-free for 7–10 days before starting.”Safe for the liver, bad for the kidneys.”

second-line agents

  • Topiramate:
    • Mechanism: GABA enhancement/Glutamate inhibition.
    • Role: Reduces heavy drinking days.
    • Issues: Cognitive slowing (“Dopamax”), paresthesias, metabolic acidosis, weight loss.
  • Gabapentin:
    • Role: Useful if concurrent mild withdrawal symptoms or anxiety.
    • Evidence: Weak/Conditional recommendation.

agents to avoid (CMAJ 2023)

  • SSRIs: Do NOT prescribe for AUD alone. Evidence shows no benefit and potential worsening of drinking in some subtypes. Only use if concurrent anxiety/depression diagnosis exists.
  • Benzodiazepines: Do NOT use for chronic AUD management (high abuse potential, synergism with alcohol). Limit to acute withdrawal.
  • Antipsychotics: No benefit for AUD; increased harm.

special considerations

  • Liver Disease:
    • Cirrhosis (Child-Pugh A/B): Acamprosate is preferred (no hepatic metabolism). Naltrexone requires caution/monitoring.
    • Acute Alcoholic Hepatitis: Avoid Naltrexone.
  • Pregnancy: All agents generally avoided; focus on psychosocial support.
  • Disulfiram (Antabuse):
    • Status: No longer first-line (adherence issues).
    • Mechanism: Irreversible inhibition of aldehyde dehydrogenase buildup of acetaldehyde flushing, vomiting, hypotension upon drinking.
    • Use: Only for highly motivated patients with supervised administration.

related pages: Alcohol Withdrawal, Naltrexone, Acamprosate, Cirrhosis