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Active clinical trials for "Opioid-Related Disorders"

Results 1041-1050 of 1134

Bone Density and Serum Testosterone in Male Methadone Maintained Patients

Opiate DependenceOsteoporosis2 more

This is a pilot study designed to answer the question " Do men who are receiving methadone maintenance therapy have lower spinal bone densities compared with age-matched controls who are not receiving methadone therapy?" The primary aim is to assess whether the mean or median spinal dual-ray energy x-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) scan results are different between these two groups of male patients. Primary measurements include: spinal bone densitometry by DEXA scan. The secondary aim is to examine the role of sex steroids in men receiving methadone maintenance therapy and their association with spinal bone density and sexual dysfunction. Secondary measurements include: serum testosterone, estradiol, lutenizing hormone, albumin, sex hormone binding globulin and Vitamin D levels; age; Brief Sexual Function Inventory; Dietary, smoking/alcohol use and physical activity; Medical history, surgical and medication use; length of time using illicit opiates and time on methadone maintenance therapy.

Completed12 enrollment criteria

Auricular Acupressure as a Non-Opioid Adjuvant in Opioid Tolerant Patients

Opioid Use Disorder

The purpose of this study is to determine if the addition of auricular acupressure to the typical pharmacological regimen given to patients on the chronic pain/addiction service will lower pain scores and decrease pain medication usage.

Completed14 enrollment criteria

Perinatal Care and Medication Assisted Treatment: Carbon/Emery Counties

Opioid-use DisorderPregnancy Related

The purpose of this study is to enhance perinatal opioid use disorder (OUD) treatment in a rural setting by developing an evaluated curriculum of perinatal OUD provider education.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Emergency Department Outcomes for Patients With Opioid Use Disorder

Opioid-use Disorder

Using mixed methods and triangulating multiples sources of data collected over the course of the parent (CTN-0079 - NCT03544112) and the ancillary studies to evaluate the feasibility, acceptability, sustainability and impact of the emergency department (ED)-initiated Buprenorphine (BUP) clinical program and implementation facilitation strategy and identify factors influencing diffusion and effectiveness.

Completed28 enrollment criteria

Providing PrEP, Hepatitis C Treatment, and MOUD Through Telemedicine at Greensboro SSP

Opioid UseOpioid Use Disorder3 more

The purpose of this study is to provide medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD) with buprenorphine and naloxone, or bup/nx, pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for HIV prevention, and/or hepatitis C treatment for persons who inject opioids accessing syringe services programs (SSPs), as part of a comprehensive harm reduction program, and assess the acceptability and feasibility of using telemedicine to implement the program. The initial visit will be conducted in person or remotely via telemedicine given COVID-19 protocols at the SSP site in Greensboro, North Carolina (NC); follow-up visits will be conducted via telemedicine.

Completed24 enrollment criteria

Does Early Administration of Ultrasound Guided Regional Anesthesia for Long Bone Fractures Effect...

Bone FractureOpioid Use1 more

Administration of ultrasound guided peripheral nerve blocks is a procedural skill set that falls within the scope of Emergency Medicine practice. Extrapolating evidence from Anesthesia and Orthopedic literature (which shows decreased post-operative opioid use by surgical patients who receive regional anesthesia as part of their pre and perioperative pain management strategy) the investigators believe that early administration of regional anesthesia for long bone fractures by providers in the ED may have an as of yet unidentified positive impact on long term opioid use. If this is indeed found to be the case, early administration of regional anesthesia for extremity fractures would represent an area of focus for ED providers in the national effort by the medical community to combat opioid abuse.

Unknown status10 enrollment criteria

Treatment for Opiate Addiction: Prognostic fActors of Responsiveness to Maintenance Treatment

Opioid-use Disorder

A global and integrative treatment of opioid-use disorders (OUD) with opiate maintenance therapy (OMT) and psychosocial interventions is recommended by all current guidelines. Treatment of OUD aim at prevents risks and consequences of opioid use (death by overdose, contamination with infectious diseases, mental and physical degradation, social exclusion and decrease of quality of life). OMT are approved since more than 20 years for OUD and a large number of patients have been treated. Nevertheless, identification of prognosis factors associated with good outcome is still limited. OMT duration, high dosages of OMT and patient good consistency have been identified as good prognosis factors but other individual factors could be involved and explain why OMT isn't as effective for all patients. The investigators assume that social environment, other addictive behaviors, psychiatric comorbidities, personality disorders and pharmacogenetics parameters might be of interest. Association between phenotype/ genotype, safety of OMT and therapeutic outcome will be especially assessed. For voluntary patients specific tools for risk reduction will be implemented (screening of infectious diseases with blood tests and fibrosis with fibroscan). Thus, the aim of TOPAZE study is to highlight prognosis factors for good outcome in the treatment of OUD moderate to severe at 12 months follow-up. Three main axes will be considered: clinical, pharmacological and pharmacogenetics.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Evaluation of Pharmacy Students' Perception of Opioid / Opiate Dependence

Opioid-Related Disorders

The pharmacist in his professional activity may have to manage opioid dependent patients. This professional activity will result in the provision of opioid substitution treatment (OST), single-use syringes, harm reduction kits and a prevention advice for the reduction of toxicity and infection risks. Since the 1990s, the consumption of OST has been steadily increasing. According to the OFDT (French Observatory of Drugs and Drug Addiction), the number of patients under OST is about 150 000 patients. Since high-dose buprenorphine is prescribed for approximately two-thirds of patients, it remains the most frequently prescribed OST in France. Recently, a French association assisting drug users (ASUD - Auto-support des usagers de drogues) performed a study in Paris (20/07/2018 - 25/08/2018) to assess the delivery of opioid replacement therapies by community pharmacists. In this study, 71% of pharmacists refused to deliver opioid replacement therapies. The main reasons reported were security (56%) and activity saturation, meaning that pharmacists considered that they had too many patients using opioid drugs. In France, the refusal of a pharmacist to deliver drugs is a punishable offence. According to the Code of ethics of pharmacists, pharmacists must respect life and people without discrimination. Pharmacists have a low perception of patients suffering from opioid addiction. Another study performed by ASUD in 93 community pharmacies, showed that pharmacists used the term "toxicomaniacs" instead of "drug users". Most pharmacists had had a bad experience with drugs users, with physical and verbal aggressions. The conclusions of this study showed that pharmacists lacked knowledge of drug users and drug use. Pharmacists knew about harm reduction kits for opioid users (containing sterile syringes, needles, water, antiseptics, etc.) and had already opened them, but very few knew how to use them. More worryingly, some pharmacists did not understand the harm reduction strategies available It thus appears that community pharmacists have a difficult relationship with opioid-dependent patients, even though these pharmacists have received education in the management of addictions during their studies. Indeed, it can consider that these courses should help to better understand the addictive disease both in its nosological / semiological and therapeutic components. Thus, it would be interesting to evaluate the impact of addiction education on pharmacists' perception of opioid dependence. In this perspective, it would be interesting to focus on pharmacy students. The objective of this study will be to evaluate the perception by pharmacy students of opioid dependent patients. Investigator would like to know if pharmacy students consider opioid addiction to be an illness and whether having taken education on drug use and addictions changes this perception.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Conflict Between Maternal Autonomy and Child Health in Substance-use

Substance-Related DisordersAlcohol-Related Disorders11 more

Qualitative project, comprising open-ended semi-structured interviews with healthcare workers, who provide antenatal care to substance-using women.

Completed3 enrollment criteria

Immediate Postpartum Nexplanon Placement in Opioid Dependent Women

Opiate AddictionPregnancy2 more

The investigators have designed a single site, Phase IV open label, prospective observational clinical trial to compare the effect of immediate postpartum Nexplanon placement (IPP) versus standard postpartum contraceptive care (control) on consistent contraceptive use and rapid repeat pregnancy at 12 months postpartum in 200 opioid dependent (OD) women.

Completed0 enrollment criteria
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