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Wakefulness Finds a Powerful Ally
NY Times ^ | June 29, 2004 | ANAHAD O'CONNOR

Posted on 06/29/2004 1:31:20 PM PDT by neverdem

Laurie Coots, a marketing executive who flies to meetings in other countries twice a week, spent years trying to conquer sleepless nights and chronic jet lag. But nothing worked, she says, and every day was a struggle to stay awake.

"It was debilitating," said Ms. Coots, 46, who is from Los Angeles. "I couldn't give an effective presentation because I was always shaky and nervous from being amped up on caffeine and stimulants."

Then she found modafinil, a small white pill that revs up the central nervous system without the jitteriness of caffeine or the addiction and euphoria of amphetamines.

"Without it my life would not be possible," she said.

Since 1998, modafinil, made by Cephalon and sold under the brand name Provigil, has quietly altered the lives of millions of people. No one knows exactly how it works, but sales of the drug are skyrocketing.

People who take it say it keeps them awake for hours or even days. It has been described as a nap in the form of a pill, making most users feel refreshed and alert but still able to go to bed when they are ready. And because its side effects are rarely worse than a mild headache or slight nausea, experts fear that it has rapidly become a tempting pick-me-up to a nation that battles sleep with more than 100 million cups of coffee a day.

Few numbers are available, but experts say that as modafinil grows more widely available, it is becoming a fixture among college students, long-haul truckers, computer programmers and others determined to burn the midnight oil. Some worry that an array of common disorders, like diabetes and sleep apnea, will go undiagnosed if doctors dole out Provigil instead of seeking the underlying diseases that cause fatigue.

In a culture of 24-hour stores, graveyard shifts and coffee shops on every corner, modafinil might also pose a more subtle danger: to the countless Americans in search of an extra edge, modafinil could be a cure for sleep.

"This drug enables us to be that much more workaholic and that much more obsessed with accomplishments and productivity, and I think our society is already extreme along those lines," said Dr. Martha J. Farah, director of the Center for Cognitive Neuroscience at the University of Pennsylvania. "The natural checks on that tendency, like needing to go to bed, are being rolled back by modafinil."

To the extent that modafinil becomes the latest lifestyle drug, as ubiquitous as Viagra, scientists warn that cutting back on sleep, even by one hour a night, can have long-term neurological and cardiovascular effects that are only now being recognized.

"It's almost fortuitous that at the same time that this drug has come out, we have increasing mounds of data showing that sleep is a restorative, protective health process," said Dr. Neil B. Kavey, director of the Sleep Disorders Center at Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center. "It affects performance, blood pressure, heart rate, insulin, various hormone secretions. No matter what medications come out that make sleep seem like a waste of time, we know that the sleep-deprived state is a bad one to be in."

Discovered by French researchers in the late 1970's, modafinil went on the market in the United States in 1998 as a treatment for narcolepsy, a severe sleep disorder. Earlier this year, the Food and Drug Administration broadened its approved uses to include obstructive sleep apnea, a narrowing or blockage of the airways, and sleeping problems caused by shift work. An effort by Cephalon to have the drug approved for a third indication, excessive sleepiness from any cause, was rejected.

But the three conditions modafinil is approved to treat make up only a fraction of its total uses. According to Cephalon, based in West Chester, Pa., 90 percent of all prescriptions for the drug are for "off-label" uses, including fatigue, depression, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, and sleepiness caused by other prescription medications.

In the last year, six American track and field athletes have tested positive for the substance, which is on the United States Olympic Committee's list of banned stimulants. One group of scientists is testing its effectiveness as an appetite suppressant in people who are overweight. And a government-financed study found that it blunts the high produced by cocaine, making it a promising treatment for addiction.

"The off-label use of this drug is staggering," said Dr. Eric Heiligenstein, a psychiatrist at the University of Wisconsin who studies substance abuse by teenagers.

"This is a very clean drug that affects all the things that help people with their cognitive functioning," he said. "The main barrier to more widespread use is that it's expensive, which will change as more insurance companies start to cover it."

For doctors, modafinil's biggest lure is its safety profile. It was used in France for several years without reports of major problems before reaching the United States. In clinical trials, only about 1 percent of people complained of side effects, including nausea, mild headache and nervousness.

But scientists point out that as with any drug, more serious side effects could appear as modafinil is used more widely.

"I'm not aware of any terrible outcomes, but I don't think there have been enough long-term studies of modafinil to rule out all dangers," said Dr. Jerome M. Siegel, chief of neurobiology research at the Veterans Affairs Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System.

Total worldwide sales of Provigil soared above $290 million in 2003, up from $207 million in 2002. Marc Goodman, a pharmaceutical analyst at Morgan Stanley, expects that figure to reach $409 million this year. More than 90 percent of that revenue, he said, will come from sales in the United States alone.

"If you look back before the drug was launched, no one would ever have believed it would be this big," Mr. Goodman said. "Everyone viewed narcolepsy as the market and didn't appreciate the benign side-effect profile and how that would play into off-label uses."

Between 2002 and 2003, Provigil's share of the stimulants market grew by 39 percent, according to IMS Health, a company that tracks the pharmaceutical industry.

In the near future, modafinil could find its way into even more medicine cabinets. Mr. Goodman said it was likely that Cephalon's patent for the compound would be challenged by several drug companies seeking to market generic versions. If they succeed, it would increase the availability of modafinil and almost certainly drive down the price of a monthly supply, which is now $120 or more.

Cephalon is working on Provigil's successor, a longer lasting version the company calls Nuvigil. It also hopes to win approval for modafinil as a treatment for children with attention deficit disorder, the most commonly diagnosed behavioral disorder of childhood. Some experts think this would open the door to the drug becoming even more of a household name.

Of all the questions surrounding modafinil, perhaps the most intriguing is how it works. After more than two decades of research, scientists are still trying to figure out just how it manipulates the brain.

"It is amazing that this drug has become so widely used without any real understanding of the basic science behind it," Dr. Siegel said.

Researchers know that modafinil is distinctly different from conventional stimulants, which ramp up arousal and set off a flurry of activity throughout the brain. Such stimulants, like cocaine and amphetamines, for example, produce wakefulness but also produce a high and can lead to dependence. Modafinil appears to steer clear of those side effects by aiming at specific structures and chemicals.

One neurotransmitter that is thought to be involved is dopamine, which mediates the reward pathways in the brain, producing euphoria, pleasure and addiction. Cocaine and amphetamines cause a surge in dopamine levels, while modafinil's effects are much weaker. A study of animals lacking a protein that helps process dopamine found that they did not respond to modafinil.

Dr. Thomas Scammell, an associate professor of neurology at Harvard's medical school who was involved in preclinical trials of the drug, believes that modafinil may home in on a single poorly understood dopamine circuit that is specific for wakefulness, while amphetamines and other stimulants activate all three of the brain's dopamine pathways, including those involved in addiction and locomotor activity. That selectivity, he said, might be crucial in modafinil's lack of unwanted side effects.

"I think it is a subtle enough drug that it doesn't just activate everything," he said.

Modafinil's impact on the brain is so subtle that brain scans of people who have taken it hardly register any change in activity at all. Give them amphetamine or a drug for Parkinson's disease, Dr. Scammell said, and "the changes in brain function are spectacular," but give them modafinil, and they show little more than ordinary wakefulness.

Most scientists suspect that at least three other transmitters are involved. One of them, histamine, is responsible for the sleep-inducing effects of many cold and allergy medications. In a study last month, Dr. Siegel, who is also a professor of psychiatry and biobehavioral sciences at the University of California at Los Angeles, found that histamine in the brain helps control consciousness.

In the rapid-eye-movement stage of sleep, lower levels of norepinephrine and serotonin keep the body still, producing the characteristically slack muscle tone of sleep. Lower levels of histamine, however, specifically reduce consciousness and awareness. In studies on animals last year, Japanese researchers found that modafinil releases histamine. French researchers this year found that it elevates levels of norepinephrine. And a smaller number of scientists suspect minor involvement by orexin, a substance that is severely depleted in narcoleptics.

Several researchers, including Dr. Siegel, have proposed a unified theory suggesting that all these chemicals are necessary for modafinil to take effect.

"Many things have to work together to achieve alertness," he said. "Modafinil might activate dopamine, which then activates norepinephrine, which then activates histamine, for example. But we still want to know where the initial action is."

Scientists think that the chain of reactions set off by modafinil leads to the hypothalamus, a small structure embedded in the forebrain that controls the body's hormones and regulatory functions. One part of the hypothalamus, known as the ventrolateral preoptic nucleus, appears to act as the body's sleep generator. When it is active, it produces a chemical, GABA, that inhibits the firing of cells involved in wakefulness and arousal. Scientists suspect that by increasing norepinephrine levels, modafinil may block the region from promoting sleep.

Just next door, in the posterior hypothalamus, are bundles of thousands of neurons that produce histamine. Damage to this region, scientists have found, causes excessive sleepiness. Dr. Rod Hughes, senior director of scientific communications for Cephalon, thinks the histamine center may generate wakefulness, counteracting the effects of its sleep-inducing neighbor. Modafinil might increase output in this region, coaxing a tired body into switching on its natural alertness system.

Some scientists say that regularly manipulating this system to skimp on sleep could have dire consequences. Studies have shown that chronic sleep deprivation damages health, weakening the immune system and increasing the likelihood of illness. It is also associated with a shorter life span.

But other experts counter that Americans will continue to cut back on sleep, whether they have modafinil or not. The toll of this deprivation has been visible for years on the nation's highways, where impaired judgment from sleepiness is blamed for about 100,000 accidents a year. Lack of sleep is also believed to have played a role in the space shuttle Challenger disaster, the nuclear meltdown at Chernobyl and the Exxon Valdez oil spill.

"In terms of error rate, 18 hours of no sleep, which many of us regularly do, is equivalent to a blood alcohol level of about .05," said Dr. Ronald Chervin, who was involved in clinical trials of modafinil and is the director of the University of Michigan sleep disorders center. "Twenty-one hours of no sleep is equivalent to a blood alcohol level of .08, which is illegal in many states."

If someone is falling asleep on the highway, and has no other option than driving to work, Dr. Chervin said, "I think many sleep experts would give that patient modafinil, and I think many do."

Dr. Farah, at the Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, is more concerned about the people who are taking modafinil simply so they can get ahead at work or finish a term paper. As it becomes more and more popular to use it for those reasons, she said, people might feel they have to take it just to seem as if they are performing normally.

"It would be a shame for a generation of young adults to come of age believing that the only way they can take on a challenging project is with some kind of pharmacological help," she said. "It's quite possible that modafinil will be the next Ritalin on campus, something that kids go off to college with. If it is widely used for A.D.H.D., then it will probably end up being readily available to the undergraduate masses."


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; US: California; US: District of Columbia; US: New York; US: Pennsylvania
KEYWORDS: add; adhd; cephalon; dopamine; health; histamine; modafinil; narcolepsy; norepinephrine; provigil; serotonin; sleepapnea
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1 posted on 06/29/2004 1:31:23 PM PDT by neverdem
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To: fourdeuce82d; El Gato; JudyB1938; Ernest_at_the_Beach; Robert A. Cook, PE; lepton; farmfriend; ...

PING


2 posted on 06/29/2004 1:33:20 PM PDT by neverdem (Xin loi min oi)
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To: neverdem

Let's make it illegal so narco-terrorists can profit from it.


3 posted on 06/29/2004 1:38:18 PM PDT by JmyBryan
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To: neverdem

I'd buy some, but it costs like 3 bucks per pill on the internet.


4 posted on 06/29/2004 1:39:24 PM PDT by Rodney King (No, we can't all just get along)
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To: All

I've had a lifelong insomnia problem (tried light therapy, hypnosis, medications up the ying-yang to no avail), so this is interesting news. But I'd like to know more. Are there any FReepers who've taken this drug who would care to comment?


5 posted on 06/29/2004 1:39:46 PM PDT by AHerald
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To: AHerald

You might try melatonin. Melatonin is also useful for jet lag, helps get your clock reset to local time.


6 posted on 06/29/2004 1:42:59 PM PDT by 1066AD
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To: neverdem

Ms. Coots should have dropped the caffeine and stimulants - then she might have been able to sleep! If she'd just let her body alone, she'd sleep when she really needed to.


7 posted on 06/29/2004 1:47:47 PM PDT by expatpat
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To: 1066AD
You might try melatonin

Tried it. It provided some relief in the short-term, but ultimately had little impact on my insomnia.

8 posted on 06/29/2004 1:48:19 PM PDT by AHerald
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To: AHerald
Although this doesn't sound much like an insomnia cure...its the opposite - an insomnia pill.

Gum

9 posted on 06/29/2004 1:59:52 PM PDT by ChewedGum (aka King of Fools)
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To: ChewedGum
doesn't sound much like an insomnia cure...its the opposite - an insomnia pill.

Thanks for the link, Gum. Yeah, the irony. Being an insomniac, of course, eventually means having to fight to stay awake and focused during the day. Caffeine and other stimulants give me headaches and make me a jittery, often inchoherent mess of a fellow, so this modifinal drug sounds promising to me.

10 posted on 06/29/2004 2:08:27 PM PDT by AHerald
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To: ChewedGum

Almost forgot: That's a damn nice site you have there, Gum. Gonna have to start keeping tabs on it.


11 posted on 06/29/2004 2:11:02 PM PDT by AHerald
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To: AHerald

Like you I have the same problem. I have done everything from all the overcounter meds to pharmaceuticals. For me it seems to come and go in jags. Like right now I am coming off of a 72 hour period with getting only about 5 hours sleep in that time. They say that the human body can really not go very long without sleep. Well, guess again I have done this for weeks at a time. I am interested in this drug too. It's one thing to be awake. It's another thing to be awake and able to function. Usually what I get is so overtired all I can do is sit a stare at the wall. I went in for a test in a sleep lab and came away with the diagnosis that I am an insomniac. Gee, thanks for the insight. They gave me some meds but none of them work. The closest I have come to to finding something is 75-100mg of Trazadone taken with melatonin. This is such a frustrating problem and makes my life very difficult. It is hard to take in any information when you are sleep deprived. Also the headaches can be a killer. I am happy to hear that there is a fellow sufferer here on FR


12 posted on 06/29/2004 2:45:14 PM PDT by foolscap
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To: AHerald
"I'd like to know more. Are there any FReepers who've taken this drug who would care to comment?"

Come on... they tested it on the french! What more do you need to know???

13 posted on 06/29/2004 2:52:50 PM PDT by Dacus943
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To: AHerald
Ok, I understand how it would be useful for insomniacs. Thanks for not pounding me for my ignorance. See how much better and informative the discussion is when we are all nice and civil?

Oh, and a big thanks for the compliment!

Gum

14 posted on 06/29/2004 3:18:16 PM PDT by ChewedGum (aka King of Fools)
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To: foolscap
I am happy to hear that there is a fellow sufferer here on FR

Think ya want to reword that?..heh heh heh

FMCDH(BITS)

15 posted on 06/29/2004 3:37:11 PM PDT by nothingnew (KERRY: "If at first you don't deceive, lie, lie again!")
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To: neverdem

I'm currently using provigil because I work graveyard and go to school full time.

Provigil doesn't replace sleep, it just delays your need to sleep. What's great about it is you can be up for 24-36 hours straight and still feel like a million bucks. After, 36 hours, at least for me, the effectiveness of the drug decreases rapidly.

What I basically do is get by with 3-4 hours a sleep during the week and sleep like 12-16 hours straight from fri night into sat afternoon. I will then be up maybe another 8 hours and sleep another 12-16 hours again sat. going into sunday.

This drug has other positive effects and no negative effects that I have seen. It seems to work as a anti-depressent, appetite suppressant, and seems to help you concentrate better, even if you are rested up.

The drug costs $4/pill if you get it off the internet or don't have insurance to pay for it. My prescription costs my insurance company $240/month and I pay only $15 co-pay.


16 posted on 06/29/2004 3:42:13 PM PDT by iamtheauthorita
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To: neverdem
Another thing that is great about provigil is that you don't get any of the jitteryness, nervousness, nausea that you can get with caffiene pills.

With caffiene, it prevents you from sleeping but doesn't relieve your desire to sleep. With provigil you feel normal and feel like you don't need to sleep, at least for the first 36 hours. Another thing that is great about provigil, is that you can sleep whenever you want to. You choose when to sleep and be sleepy.

I probably sound like a advertisement now from the evil, big pharmecetical industry (Big Drugs).
17 posted on 06/29/2004 3:47:19 PM PDT by iamtheauthorita
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To: foolscap
It's one thing to be awake. It's another thing to be awake and able to function.

Is that ever true. I long ago was able to get past the almost nightly frustration of not being able to fall asleep, realizing that the negative thinking ("Oh my God, I can't sleep. Woe is me, etc.) it was merely compounding the problem. But the inability to function normally in day to day life due to the lack of sleep remains the most difficult part of the problem for me.

I'm with you in spirit, knowing just how awful and debilitating insomnia can be. You say a prayer for me while I send some your way. There's a better day ahead.

18 posted on 06/29/2004 3:51:52 PM PDT by AHerald
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To: Dacus943

LOL!


19 posted on 06/29/2004 3:53:47 PM PDT by AHerald
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To: AHerald
Since you have the same problem there is a question I'd like to ask. When you are coming off of a prolonged period no sleep do you find that when at last you begin to sleep again you fall instantly into a dream state? It seems as if the brain has a back long of dreams it needs to process. The problem with that is is that I will begin to dream within 15 minutes or so of starting to sleep. My mind may be sleeping but my body is not ready. This will instantly shock me back into wakefulness. I usually have to go through a period of retraining myself to sleep. Even if the full out insomnia has ended it takes about a week before I can sleep for more than two to three hours because of this problem. Even at my all time best sleep wise I never sleep more that four hours without waking up. I can not even picture in my mind what it would be like to sleep a full eight hours. I am comparing notes because I have not spoken with another who has an insomnia problem as sever as mine

Like you I have just learned to accept it. When it starts up I just figure there is not sense in fighting it. That only makes it worse. I will usually get up and go do something. I have found that 3:00 in the morning is a great time to get some housework done or organize that closet I've been meaning to get to. Thank God for Coast to Coast. Believe me Art Bell, George Noory and I have spent many a night together.

20 posted on 06/30/2004 5:40:38 AM PDT by foolscap
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