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Memantine for Hair Pulling

An Alzheimer’s drug outperforms placebo by a wide margin

STUDY: Grant JE et al, Am J Psychiatry 2023;180:348–356

STUDY TYPE: Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial

FUNDING: Independent

Background

There’s no FDA-approved medication for trichotillomania (compulsive hair pulling) or skin-picking disorder, and behavioral therapy — the first-line treatment — is hard to access. The glutamate system has been implicated in the compulsive, habit-driven behaviors that characterize both conditions, making memantine, an NMDA glutamate receptor antagonist approved for Alzheimer’s disease, a plausible candidate.

The Study

One hundred adults with trichotillomania, skin-picking disorder, or both were randomized to memantine (10–20 mg/day) or placebo for 8 weeks. The primary outcome was symptom severity on the NIMH Trichotillomania Symptom Severity Scale (NIMH scale), modified to include skin picking. Disability and anxiety were secondary outcomes.

By week 8, 60.5% of participants on memantine were rated much or very much improved on the Clinical Global Impressions scale, compared with 8.3% on placebo (a number needed to treat of 1.9). The effect size on the primary scale was large (Hedges’ g = 1.76), comparable to or exceeding behavioral therapy in prior meta-analyses. Disability (Sheehan Disability Scale) and anxiety (Anxiety scale (HAM-A)) also favored memantine. The drug was well tolerated; fatigue and dizziness were the most common side effects, and only two participants discontinued due to adverse effects.

The main limitations are the short duration — 8 weeks is unlikely enough for chronic conditions — and the single-center design. The sample was also mostly women and of mild-to-moderate severity, though a subgroup analysis in more severe cases found even higher response rates.

Practice Implications
  1. The effect size is striking, but large effects are common in small trials (this one is medium sized though).
  2. Consider memantine at 10–20 mg/day for trichotillomania.
  3. Another glutamatergic treatment, N-acetylcysteine, (NAC) may also work in trichotillomnia (it has one positive and one negative trial).

— Chris Aiken, MD
Director, Psych Partners
Editor in Chief, Carlat Psychiatry Report

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