Project FIRST - Financial Incentives to Reduce Substance Use and Improve Treatment
HIVOpiate DependenceThis study will test whether contingency management (monetary vouchers contingent on abstinence from drugs) that reinforces one behavior (achieving abstinence from drugs) leads to improved outcomes in other related behaviors (achieving HIV viral load suppression). In a randomized controlled trial, the investigators propose to test whether an abstinence-reinforcing contingency management intervention improves viral load suppression in HIV-infected drug users.
Memantine as a Supplement to Naltrexone in Treating Heroin Dependence
Opioid DependenceHeroin DependenceProspective participants will undergo a screening process at the clinic to determine eligibility. After screening, eligible patients will complete an 8-day inpatient detoxification, followed by a 12-week outpatient phase. Patients will be randomly assigned to one of two conditions (1) Naltrexone + Placebo; (2) Naltrexone + Memantine 20 mg bid. Long-acting, injectable form of naltrexone (Vivitrol) will be administered once per month (the total of three injections) while memantine or placebo will be taken daily. In addition, patients will receive twice weekly psychosocial intervention that will include motivational interviewing and cognitive-behavioral relapse prevention. The outpatient treatment will also consist of 3 weekly visits to the clinic in which patients will receive counseling to help maintain abstinence and improve compliance with study medication.
Buprenorphine's Dose Response Curve
Opioid-related DisordersThis is a residential study that looks at the effects of buprenorphine in persons who abuse but are not dependent on opioids. Animal studies show that very high doses of buprenorphine produce less effects than mid-range doses. This suggests that buprenorphine can be a very safe medication. However, no studies in humans have tested higher doses in a similar way. The goal of this study is to show the effects of single doses of buprenorphine, across a range of doses, in persons who are not physically dependent on opioids (but do abuse opioids).
The German Project of Heroin Assisted Treatment of Opiate Dependent Patients
Opioid DependenceThe study will test the hypotheses that heroin assisted treatment, compared to methadone maintenance treatment, is more effective with regard to the improvement of health, reduction of illicit drug consumption, decrease of criminal behaviour, rise in the accessibility and retainment, detachment from a social drug context, social stabilisation in the sense of new drug-free contacts, improved vocational circumstances, financial security, stabilisation of the living situation, enrollment in subsequent treatment in the case of heroin dependent persons who could not be effectively reached or successfully treated so far, and it will check which is the optimal treatment setting with regard to these aims. The medication is injectable pure heroin (diacetylmorphine) 3x/d, or d l methadone 1x/d The study design is multicentre, open, randomised, 4 x 2 stratified. The study duration is 24 months (individual period of investigation), 1. study phase: 12 moths (protocol part B) and 2. study phase: 12 moths (part C). Patients recruited have an opiate dependency according to ICD-10, who are not being treated currently or who are in a methadone maintenance programme with an unsatisfactory course of treatment.
Employment-based Reinforcement to Motivate Drug Abstinence in the Treatment of Drug Addiction. -...
BehaviorAddictive4 moreThe purpose of this study is to determine whether long-term exposure to the Therapeutic Workplace intervention could sustain drug abstinence over an extended period of time in heroin- and cocaine-dependent, unemployed, treatment-resistant young mothers.
Insomnia and Drug Relapse Risk
Poor Quality SleepOpiate AddictionThe purposes of this study are: to evaluate the relationship between subjective complaints of sleep and objective measures of sleep quality, as measured through polysomnography, and to evaluate the efficacy of trazodone, as compared to placebo, in individuals early in methadone maintenance.
Lofexidine for Inpatient Opiate Detox
Opiate AddictionThe main objective of this study is to investigate the effectiveness of lofexidine in reducing withdrawal symptoms among subjects undergoing opiate detoxification. Currently, lofexidine is the most commonly used non-opiate medication for detoxification from opiates in the United Kingdom (UK). There is no non-opiate medication approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the same indication in the United States (US). The only medications currently approved by the FDA for opiate detoxification are methadone and buprenorphine. These medications, however, have the potential to be abused. Lofexidine, on the other hand, offers a unique advantage for opiate detoxification because it is not addicting, is easy to use, and has a favorable safety profile.
Prescription Opioid Addiction Treatment Study (POATS)
Opiate DependenceSubstance-related Disorders1 moreThe purpose of this study is to determine whether treatment outcome for subjects dependent on prescription opioid analgesics can be improved by adding individual drug counseling to the prescription of buprenorphine/naloxone with standard medical management. This will be examined during: a) an initial four-week treatment with taper; b) a 12-week stabilization treatment for those who do not respond successfully to the initial treatment; and c) a long-term follow-up assessment at 1.5 years, 2.5 years, and 3.5 years after treatment.
Behavioral Naltrexone Therapy: A Novel Treatment for Heroin Dependence
Opiate DependenceThe overall goal of this research project is to test the efficacy of a newly developed therapy, Behavioral Naltrexone Therapy (BNT), to enhance the success of naltrexone maintenance and long-term abstinence for individuals with heroin dependence. This study includes free detox and outpatient treatment for opioid dependence that includes medication and a behavioral intervention.
Methadone Maintenance & HIV Risk in Ukraine
Opioid DependenceTreatment of opioid dependence is an important way to reduce the spread of HIV and other infectious diseases, particularly in Ukraine since intravenous opioid use is the major way these infections are being spread. This proposal will be done at the Kiev City Narcology Hospital and the City AIDS Center with collaborators from the University of Alabama and the University of Colorado. It will study the acceptability and impact of a 3-month course of methadone maintenance on 50 persons with opioid dependence, 25 who are HIV+ and 25 HIV-. The proposed work will build on a relationship that was established with the Ukrainian Co-Principal Investigator, Sergiy Dvoryak, M.D., during his Humphrey Fellowship at Johns Hopkins in 1999-2000 when he spent time with Dr. Woody and Metzger at the Penn Addiction and Treatment and Research Center. It will also extend studies of pharmacologic treatment for opioid dependence and risk reduction behavioral interventions that are being done by Drs. Woody, Schumacher and Booth in Russia and Ukraine. Primary aims are to: measure the acceptability and compliance with a 3-month course of methadone maintenance in HIV+ and HIV- patients; measure the impact of a 3-month course of methadone in reducing opioid use in HIV+ and HIV- patients; measure the impact of a 3-month course of methadone on reducing HIV risk behavior in HIV+_and HIV- patients. Secondary aims are to: assess the degree to which a 3-month course of methadone maintenance reduces illegal activities and improves employment and psychiatric symptoms; determine short-term outcome after completion of methadone treatment; and obtain pilot data on the prevalence of hepatitis B and C among study patients. This study will provide pilot data on the acceptability and efficacy of a short-term course of methadone maintenance on HIV+ and HIV- persons in a setting where this treatment has not been evaluated, on the feasibility of conducting the kind of work that is proposed, and will enhance research capabilities of Kiev investigators for future HIV prevention and treatment studies.