Pubdate: Wed, 10 Jul 2002 Source: Boston Globe (MA) Copyright: 2002 Globe Newspaper Company Contact: http://www.boston.com/globe/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/52 Author: Quynh-Giang Tran Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/walters.htm (Walters, John) DRUG POLICY CHIEF LOOKS TO THE ROOT OF ADDICTION US Eyes 10% Reduction In Abuse In Two Years White House drug policy director John P. Walters called on scientists yesterday to develop new tools for diagnosing and treating drug addiction, saying that major advances in genetics and neuroscience could help devise medicines that attack the root causes of substance abuse. Speaking at a substance abuse conference in Cambridge, Walters, director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, said science must play a key role in meeting President Bush's goal of a 10 percent reduction in drug abuse within two years and a 25 percent cut over five years. He said the administration has doubled federal spending on drug abuse research to $933 million, financing work at 10 locations nationwide, including at Massachusetts General Hospital and McLean Hospital in Belmont. ''Drug addiction is a disease of the brain,'' said Walters. He challenged geneticists, neuroscientists, and magnetic resonance imaging, or MRI, specialists to work cooperatively to find a better understanding of addiction. ''Substance abuse is an important issue that warrants the determined efforts of America's top scientists,'' he said. Rapid improvement in brain-imaging technologies such as MRIs is helping to change the understanding of basic human drives such as motivation and satisfaction from merely an attitude to behavior ruled by brain circuitry and genetics. Current treatment for drug abuse is scattershot, based on symptoms and the drug of choice, rather than a full understanding of the brain's wiring that determines an addict's motivation for abuse, said Dr. David Gastfriend, director of addiction services and a psychiatric researcher at Mass. General. ''We don't have specific medicines and therapies to target the different kinds of addicts, even those with the same drug of abuse,'' he said. Treatment should focus on the part of the brain that regulates the addiction, which can vary person by person even for the same kind of addiction. ''The brain doesn't lie,'' said Dr. Hans Breiter, psychiatric researcher at Mass. General, whose team just received a $7 million high resolution brain scanner that will be used to study the brain activity of 3,000 cocaine and nicotine addicts as well as people suffering from depression. In their research, scientists at Mass. General will study abnormal brain images, which are drastically different from those of nonaddicted individuals. By comparing these different brain patterns, or phenotypes, Breiter will research how the brain's activities are affected by addiction and outline the ways in which a predisposition for addiction can be genetically inherited. Once the genetic code for addiction is identified, researchers hope to develop a drug treatment for the part of the brain that controls addiction. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom