Alcohol use disorders (AUD) are common and impairing. Many pharmacologic interventions have been approved for AUD; baclofen is one among these. More than a dozen randomized controlled trials (RCTs) have examined the safety and efficacy of baclofen in AUD; these RCTs have been pooled in 4 recent meta-analyses, each with different study selection criteria, different objectives, different methods, and different results. The general impression from these meta-analyses is that the benefits with baclofen are unimpressive in patients with AUD. With the background that individualized, rather than fixed, high dosing with baclofen could be critical for success, a large (n = 320), industry-independent, 62-center French RCT (the Bacloville trial) examined whether individually uptitrated, high-dose baclofen could reduce alcohol consumption in heavy drinkers across a year of treatment. The study design, the high dropout rate, and the statistical methods of this trial threw up several complexities; in consequence, the main primary and secondary outcomes could not be satisfactorily interpreted. However, there were many other secondary outcomes that seemed to favor baclofen over placebo, though certain concerns remained. This RCT is explained and its findings are carefully dissected and interpreted. It is concluded that individualized treatment with high-dose baclofen (30-300 mg/d) may be a useful second-line approach in heavy drinkers who wish to reduce levels of alcohol intake; baclofen may be particularly useful in patients with liver disease, for whom certain other pharmacologic interventions are relatively contraindicated. However, the risk of serious adverse events with high-dose baclofen, and its pharmacodynamic interaction with alcohol, must both be kept in mind. Practical issues are discussed.