Pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic effects of methylphenidate and MDMA administered alone or in combination.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to compare the pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic effects of methylphenidate and MDMA, alone or in combination, in healthy subjects.
Results Summary
MDMA increased positive mood more than methylphenidate but reduced recognition of negative emotions. Combined use did not enhance psychoactive effects but increased cardiovascular and adverse effects compared to either drug alone.
Population
Healthy subjects
Effective Dosage
125 mg MDMA
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
Methylphenidate and MDMA co-administration increased haemodynamic and adverse effects.
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Methylphenidate | no change | psychotropic effects of MDMA | healthy subjects | - | did not enhance | #1 |
Methylphenidate | increase | psychostimulant effects | healthy subjects | - | produced | #2 |
co-administration of methylphenidate and MDMA | increase | haemodynamic and adverse effects | healthy subjects | - | were significantly higher | #3 |
Methylphenidate | no change | pharmacokinetics of MDMA | healthy subjects | - | did not change | #4 |
MDMA | no change | pharmacokinetics of methylphenidate | healthy subjects | - | did not change | #5 |
125 mg of MDMA | increase | positive mood | healthy subjects | more than 60 mg of methylphenidate | increased | #6 |
methylphenidate | increase | activity and concentration | healthy subjects | more than MDMA | enhanced | #7 |
Methylphenidate | increase | recognition of sad and fearful faces | healthy subjects | - | enhanced | #8 |
MDMA | decrease | recognition of negative emotions | healthy subjects | - | reduced | #9 |
MDMA | no change | - | healthy subjects | - | found acute pharmacodynamic tolerance to | #10 |
methylphenidate | no change | - | healthy subjects | - | did not find acute pharmacodynamic tolerance to | #11 |
combined use of methylphenidate and MDMA | no change | psychoactive effects | - | - | does not produce more | #12 |
combined use of methylphenidate and MDMA | increase | cardiovascular and adverse effects | - | - | potentially enhances | #13 |
Methylphenidate and 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA, 'ecstasy') are widely misused psychoactive drugs. Methylphenidate increases brain dopamine and norepinephrine levels by blocking the presynaptic reuptake transporters. MDMA releases serotonin, dopamine and norepinephrine through the same transporters. Pharmacodynamic interactions of methylphenidate and MDMA are likely. This study compared the pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic effects of methylphenidate and MDMA administered alone or in combination in healthy subjects using a double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover design. Methylphenidate did not enhance the psychotropic effects of MDMA, although it produced psychostimulant effects on its own. The haemodynamic and adverse effects of co-administration of methylphenidate and MDMA were significantly higher compared with MDMA or methylphenidate alone. Methylphenidate did not change the pharmacokinetics of MDMA and vice versa. Methylphenidate and MDMA shared some subjective amphetamine-type effects; however, 125 mg of MDMA increased positive mood more than 60 mg of methylphenidate, and methylphenidate enhanced activity and concentration more than MDMA. Methylphenidate and MDMA differentially altered facial emotion recognition. Methylphenidate enhanced the recognition of sad and fearful faces, whereas MDMA reduced the recognition of negative emotions. Additionally, the present study found acute pharmacodynamic tolerance to MDMA but not methylphenidate. In conclusion, the combined use of methylphenidate and MDMA does not produce more psychoactive effects compared with either drug alone, but potentially enhances cardiovascular and adverse effects. The findings may be of clinical importance for assessing the risks of combined psychostimulant misuse. Trial registration identification number: NCT01465685 (http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01465685).