Escalation of intravenous fentanyl self-administration and assessment of withdrawal behavior in male and female mice

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Abstract

Background

The rise in overdose deaths from synthetic opioids, especially fentanyl, necessitates the development of preclinical models to study fentanyl use disorder (FUD). While there has been progress with rodent models, additional translationally relevant models are needed to examine excessive fentanyl intake and withdrawal symptoms.

Methods

The study performed intravenous self-administration (IVSA) of fentanyl in male and female C57BL/6J mice for 14 days. Mechanical pain sensitivity during withdrawal was assessed using the von Frey test. Anxiety-like behavior was evaluated via the open field test one-week into abstinence and incubation of craving for fentanyl was assessed four weeks into abstinence.

Results

Both male and female mice demonstrated a significant escalation in fentanyl intake over the 14 days of self-administration, with significant front-loading observed in the final days of self-administration. Increased mechanical pain sensitivity was present from 36- to 48-hour into withdrawal and increased anxiety-like behavior was found 1 week into abstinence. Four weeks into abstinence, mice showed significantly higher active lever pressing than the final self-administration session prior to abstinence.

Conclusions

The study establishes a translationally relevant mouse model of IVSA of fentanyl, effectively encapsulating critical aspects of FUD, including escalation of drug intake, front-loading behavior, withdrawal symptoms, and prolonged craving for drug into abstinence. This model offers a robust basis for further exploration into behavioral and neurobiological mechanisms involved in fentanyl dependence and potential therapeutic strategies.

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