Effectiveness of an Intervention in Patients With Excessive Alcohol Consumption
Alcohol ConsumptionAlcohol Use DisorderMain objective: to verify the effectiveness of a brief intervention, based on the motivational interview (MI), in patients with excessive alcohol consumption assisted in Primary Care (PC). Design: a multicenter, randomized, cluster-controlled clinical trial with two parallel arms. PC professionals will be randomized to one of the two study groups: 1) Experimental Group (EG): MI-based approach; 2) Control group (CG): usual care. At least 50 family doctors, residents and nurses will participate, recruiting PC patients (n = 394). GE intervention: Training program to acquire specific skills on approaching risky alcohol consumption. It will consist of a workshop, with two video recordings of consultations with simulated standardized patients, before and after it, with each participant receiving formative feedback at the end. -Intervention GC: medical advice that is usually performed in these patients. To measure the knowledge and attitude of professionals in dealing with patients with alcohol consumption, they will fill out a validated questionnaire. In addition, expert evaluators, after viewing the video recordings, will fill out a check-list to check the attitude of each professional, using the EVEM Scale. -Study population: patients ≥14 years of age with risky consumption, detected by the professional in health centers in the province of Córdoba (Spain). Sample size: Assuming a loss rate of 5%, and the "cluster design effect", the number of subjects to be recruited is estimated at 394 (197 / group). Intervention control mechanism: each participant will be audio-recorded with a real patient in a randomly chosen visit, evaluating her skills with the EVEM scale. The follow-up period for each patient will be 12 months, with 4 visits (initial, per month, 3 months, and 6 months) and 4 interleaved telephone contacts. The main outcome variable will be the level of self-reported alcohol consumption and the AUDIT questionnaire score. -Statistical analysis by intention to treat. Descriptive analysis and initial comparability of the groups will be carried out, and the effect of the intervention (dependent variable: abstinence or consumption reduction and AUDIT score) will be evaluated through bivariate and multivariate analysis.
Manipulating Ghrelin Signaling Via GOAT Inhibition in Alcohol Use Disorder
Alcohol Use DisorderBackground: People with alcohol use disorder (AUD) have trouble controlling their drinking. Medications can help some people with AUD but are not effective for many others. Researchers want to test new drugs to better treat the disease. Objective: To see if the investigational drug GLWL-01 is safe to use in people with alcohol problems. Also, to find out if the drug reduces the urge to drink alcohol. Eligibility: People ages 18-70 with Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) Design: Participants will be screened under protocol 06-DA-N415. Participants will be admitted to the inpatient facility, Clinical Research Unit (CRU) on the Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center for up to 21 days. They may leave the CRU on specified days pending approval. All their meals will be provided. They cannot drink alcohol. Participants will take either the study drug or a placebo by mouth twice daily. They will not know which they are receiving. Participants will complete many questionnaires. Participants may have urine tests. Participants will complete tasks on a computer. Participants will have blood samples obtained on some study days. Participants will taste and indicate their preference for sweet liquids. Participants' blood pressure, pulse, respiratory rate, body temperature and weight, heart rate and rhythm will be measured. Participants will have breath testing to obtain information about smoking. Participants will be exposed to alcohol cues, water, and food cues in a bar-like room. Cues are things that might make them feel the urge to eat or drink alcohol. Participants will take part in a virtual buffet experiment. They will wear a virtual reality headset, walk around a virtual room, and select virtual food and drink....
Mavoglurant in Alcohol Drinking
Alcohol DrinkingThe purpose of this alcohol-interaction pilot study is to provide information on the effect of mavoglurant on the pharmacokinetics of alcohol and on alcohol responses, including stimulation, sedation, intoxication, body sway and physiological responses. The investigators propose to test the effects of 200 mg mavoglurant versus placebo on alcohol related responses. This is a between subjects double blind randomized design in which the investigators plan to run 40 subjects to obtain 28 completers.
Transdiagnostic CBT for Comorbid Alcohol Use and Anxiety Disorders
Alcohol Use DisorderAnxiety DisordersAlmost 18 million US adults have alcohol use disorders (AUD), with one third of these individuals also diagnosed with anxiety disorders (AXD). The coexistence of AUD and AXD imposes a high burden via healthcare costs and lost productivity. To date, existing treatment approaches for addressing AUD/AXD comorbidity have been only modestly effective and there is a lack of adequate research to guide treatment decisions. The Unified Protocol (UP) is a transdiagnostic, cognitive-behavioral therapy that has shown efficacy in treating emotional disorders. The efficacy of the UP to facilitate abstinence from alcohol consumption in individuals with comorbid AUD/AXD has also been examined, with results from this study indicating a reduction from baseline in drinks consumed per day. However, further evaluation of the UP for managing AUD/AXD is warranted. In this clinical trial, the investigators will further assess the UP's effectiveness in reducing alcohol consumption in patients with comorbid AUD/AXD. Participants will be randomized to one of two conditions: 1) treatment with the UP or 2) treatment with therapist-guided Take Control (TC; a computerized alcohol reduction program). In addition, in a subset of twenty-five participants, functional magnetic resonance scanning (fMRI) will be used to examine the effects of the UP on changes in brain activity in areas important to regulation of emotional and reward processes implicated in excessive alcohol consumption. The researchers' primary hypotheses are that the UP group will, compared to the TC group: 1) be superior in acute symptom reduction from pre- to post-treatment, and 2) evidence greater reductions in percent days heavy drinking, percent days of drinking per week, and alcohol craving.
A Social Media Personalized Normative Feedback Intervention for Heavy Drinking College Students...
Alcohol ConsumptionThis study seeks to evaluate the unique and synergistic efficacy of social media-specific personalized normative feedback targeting the reduction of alcohol use among heavy-drinking college students who post alcohol-related content on social media. Hypothesis: Alcohol personalized normative feedback, social media-specific personalized normative feedback, and the Alcohol personalized normative feedback+ social media-specific personalized normative feedback conditions will be more effective in reducing drinking than the attention control condition.
A Brief Intervention for Alcohol Users With Interpersonal Trauma
Heavy DrinkingAlcohol Drinking2 moreThe current proposal aims to enhance a mobile-delivered brief intervention for young adults with heavy alcohol use and interpersonal trauma by including adaptive coping strategies for managing trauma-related distress and using peer coaches after delivery of the intervention to maintain treatment gains. Individuals will be randomized to a modified brief intervention incorporating with peer coaches, a standard brief intervention, or assessment only. Participants will be followed up at 3 and 6 months post intervention. The investigators hypothesize that the trauma-informed and peer-supported brief intervention (TIPS-BI) will show low levels of dropout, will be perceived positively by participants, and will result in greater reductions in alcohol use compared to a standard brief intervention and assessment only.
Digital Motivational Behavioral Economic Intervention to Reduce Risky Drinking Among Community-Dwelling...
Alcohol DrinkingEmerging adult risky drinkers living in disadvantaged communities often have limited access to rewarding activities and adult roles that offer alternatives to heavy drinking. Guided by behavioral economics, this cluster randomized controlled trial will evaluate a brief behavioral intervention aimed at increasing future orientation and engaging pro-social alternatives to drinking delivered using a peer-driven sampling method and digital platform well suited for accessing their social networks.
Microbiome Metabolites and Alcohol in HIV to Reduce CVD RCT
MicrotiaDysbiosis3 moreAmong people living with HIV, heavy drinking increases the risk of heart disease and death. Studies suggest that alcohol changes the number and kind of bacteria in your gut and these changes increase the risk of heart disease and death. This randomized controlled trial will determine whether a pill containing healthy gut bacteria can increase the number good bacteria in the gut, lower levels of inflammation, and lower the risk of heart disease and death.
Efficacy and Safety of Dual-target Deep Brain Stimulation for Treatment-resistant Alcohol Use Disorder...
Alcohol Use DisorderDeep Brain StimulationThis is a multi-center, single arm, prospective, open-label, extendable study for the efficacy and safety of dual-target deep brain stimulation for treatment-resistant alcohol use disorder.
Brief Family Involved Treatment Telehealth
Alcohol Use DisorderImproving alcohol use disorder (AUD) treatment among Veterans is a national public health problem. The rate of AUD among Veterans is twice that of civilians, with up to 50% of Veterans having AUD. Family-based AUD programs are rarely undertaken in busy treatment clinics, and Veterans with problem drinking behavior or AUD are commonly excluded from couple therapies. As a result, there is a need to develop effective family AUD treatments that are both brief and highly accessible to Veterans. The purpose of this study is to evaluate a new treatment add-on called Brief Family-Involved Treatment (B-FIT), which will be delivered via telehealth among Veterans engaged in alcohol-based treatment/therapy. This study is an 12-week, Stage-II, open randomized controlled trial examining B-FIT in combination with treatment as usual (TAU), (in this case B-FIT+ Cognitive Behavioral Therapy treatment) as compared to TAU alone (CBT treatment).Veterans and their treatment companion (family member, partner, friend) will complete weekly assessments during the treatment phase in addition to 3 & 6 month follow-up assessments, all via telehealth.