Buprenorphine Detoxification - BBDVI - 19
Opioid-Related DisordersThe purpose of this study is to examine the long-term efficacy of alternate-day dosing schedules in promoting treatment compliance in the absence of confounding behavioral contingencies.
Buprenorphine Pharmacology Related to Addiction Treatment - 21
Opioid-Related DisordersThe purpose of this study is to examine if chronic buprenorphine administration will generate supersensitivity to opiates.
Effects of Combined Sevoflurane and Nitrous Oxide Inhalation - 14
Opioid-Related DisordersSubstance-Related DisordersThe purpose of this study is to determine the effects of combined sevoflurane and nitrous oxide inhalation on mood, psychomotor performance, and the pain response in humans.
Buprenorphine Maintenance for Opioid Addicts - 1
Opioid-Related DisordersThe purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of buprenorphine and desipramine in treatment of opiate and cocaine dependence.
Multicenter Clinical Trial of Buprenorphine - 3
Opioid-Related DisordersThe purpose of this study is to test the efficacy and safety of buprenorphine.
Opioid Reduction Toolkit Reduces Opioids Prescribed and Consumed
Opioid AbuseOpioid Misuse1 moreInvestigators studied a baseline population of patients receiving pancreatectomies at their institution and determined how many opioid pills each patient was prescribed and how many they took. Based on this data they created a toolkit to provide to prescribers to give patients a modified number of pills. The amount prescribed and consumed was measured after intervention.
Buprenorphine in the Emergency Department
Opioid WithdrawalOpioid-use DisorderThis is a pilot randomized control trial randomizing patients presenting in opioid withdrawal to the emergency department to receive either one of clonidine (usual standard of care) or buprenorphine for their opioid withdrawal. Primary treatment outcome is attendance at a rapid access addiction medicine clinic within a few days of emergency room presentation. Secondary treatment outcome is treatment status with respect to opioid agonist treatment at one month post emergency room visit.
Study of Treatment for Opioid Dependence and Anxiety Disorders
Anxiety DisordersOpiate AddictionAnxiety is highly prevalent among individuals with opioid dependence and confers greater risk for continued opioid use and poor treatment outcomes. However, there are currently no efficacious treatments available for co-occurring opioid dependence and anxiety. The ultimate aims of this trial are the development and testing of a novel integrated cognitive behavioral treatment (I-CBT) for co-occurring opioid dependence and anxiety disorders. This clinical trial consists of two phases: (1) open-trial pilot (2) randomized control trial. We hypothesize that I-CBT will be a feasible and acceptable treatment that will result in significant reductions in anxiety and opioid use.
Naltrexone vs Buprenorphine-Naloxone for Opioid Dependence in Norway
Opioid DependencePersons dependent on opioids like heroin, morphine, or codeine have a high risk of relapse, overdose and overdose death. This risk is elevated even further following discharge from treatment or correctional institutions where patients have been detoxified. At the moment, state-of-the-art treatment is based on maintaining the dependence on opioids by daily intake of opioid medications like methadone or buprenorphine. Recently, a medication containing the blocking agent naltrexone was approved in the US; this does not maintain dependence but instead blocks heroin and other opioids for 28 days after intramuscular administration. This study will conduct a 12-week randomized comparison of naltrexone intramuscular suspension (XL-NTX) with daily buprenorphine-naloxone in OMT. Medication will start preceding discharge from a treatment or correctional facility to participating catchment regions in Norway. The main hypotheses are that XL-NTX will do equally well as - or better than - OMT on the proportion of biological samples negative for opioids, retention, self-reported use of alcohol and illicit drugs. Following the 12-week randomized period, there will be a 36-week period where participants can receive the study medication of their choice. After the end of the study, data from national registry databases can be collected for a further 12 months on outcomes such as recidivism, mortality and morbidity.
Linking Hospitalized Injection Drug Users to Buprenorphine
Opiate DependenceThis study tests whether starting Suboxone (buprenorphine) during a medical hospitalization, and then providing an appointment (a "link") for after discharge to maintenance buprenorphine in an outpatient setting will reduce HIV risk behavior in individuals who inject opioids.