Maternal Opioid Treatment: Human Experimental Research - Data Yield Appropriate Decisions
Opioid-use DisorderOpioid Withdrawal2 moreThis study will compare medically-supervised withdrawal (MSW, 'detoxification') to opioid agonist treatment (OAT, 'maintenance') with buprenorphine for pregnant women with opioid use disorder in terms of maternal, fetal, and neonatal outcomes. Outcomes will be assessed during pregnancy, at birth and for 12 months postpartum. This study has the potential to impact health service policy and practices in terms of the treatment options of pregnant women with opioid use disorder.
Youth Opioid Recovery Support: Improving Care Systems
Opioid-Related DisordersOpioid addiction, also referred to as opioid use disorder, among young people is a growing health concern for patients and their families. Overdose deaths related to opioids have been steadily increasing in number and are at an all-time high. Opioid addiction has serious consequences such as getting HIV, legal problems, relationship problems, and unemployment. Currently, there are two standard of care office-based medications available to treat opioid use disorder, buprenorphine and naltrexone. Naltrexone has been available for several years as an extended-release monthly injectable formulation, and more recently buprenorphine is as well. Both of these medications are typically administered in the medical office setting. Long-acting injection medications like these help people that may otherwise forget doses, skip doses, and relapse. MAT that are FDA-approved such as these paired with counseling can help sustain recovery, but retention to treatment is a concern, especially among young adults. Many barriers arise for attending office-based treatment (e.g., transportation) often resulting in falling away from treatment and relapsing. Involvement of family members is often challenged by health care provider concerns about patient privacy, and existing relationship strain between patients and their families. The Youth Opioid Recovery Support (YORS) treatment delivery model hopes to address barriers to retention to substance treatment among those with opioid use disorder who have already decided to get treatment with either extended-release naltrexone or extended-release buprenorphine. The YORS model involves: 1) home-delivery of standard-of-care medication and individual/family counseling services; 2) assertive outreach efforts by the treatment team; and 3) contingency management incentives upon receipt of treatment. This service model has already shown promise in addressing barriers to treatment retention particularly difficulties with medication adherence in patients who were prescribed monthly injectable extended-release naltrexone. Now that extended-release buprenorphine is also available, broader MAT options provided in an assertive service delivery model may maximize treatment retention and recovery outcomes. Further, transitioning participants from home-based receipt of treatment to clinic-based care begins the translation to sustainable health care.
Virtual Reality for Chronic Pain and Opioid Use Disorder Pilot
Chronic PainOpioid Use DisorderThis is a pilot feasibility study of a virtual reality device for patients with co-morbid chronic pain and opioid use disorder.
Cannabidiol on Reward- and Stress-related Neurocognitive Processes in Individuals With Opioid Use...
Opioid-use DisorderThe purpose of this study is to determine the impact of cannabidiol on reward- and stress-related neurocognitive processes among individuals with opioid use disorder on buprenorphine or methadone treatment.
Feasibility Study of Novel Prescription Digital Therapeutic Supporting Unobserved Buprenorphine...
Opioid Use DisorderThe purpose of this study is to assess feasibility of an at-home digital therapy designed to support buprenorphine initiation and adherence.
Behavioral Activation for Opioid Use Disorder
Opioid Use DisorderThe overall purpose of this pilot study is to evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of values-based behavioral activation (BA) as an adjunct intervention for patients receiving medications for opioid use disorder (OUD) in primary care. Researcher will evaluate the following aims: 1) examine the feasibility of BA for OUD in primary care, 2) examine whether the BA intervention and study requirements are acceptable to participants, and 3) determine the psychometric properties of the outcome measures in people with OUD. Participants will complete 4-6 brief counseling sessions over the course of 12 weeks. During the first session, participants will discuss values and recovery outcomes important to them. Next, they will set 2-3 personal goals to work on before the next BA session. At the follow-up sessions, participants will update the counselor on progress made or challenges experienced. Personal values will be reviewed and participant goals updated. Study measures (surveys and urine drug tests) will be completed at the start, partway through, and at the end of the intervention.
Trial of Adherence App for Buprenorphine Treatment (TAAB) Study
Opioid-Related DisordersThe purpose of this study is to pilot test a smartphone application that allows video-based directly observed therapy for participants receiving buprenorphine treatment for opioid use disorder in office-based settings. This application may help participants take their medication more regularly so that they are successful in treatment. Participants will be randomly assigned to either using a smartphone application that allows them to take daily videos confirming their buprenorphine medication ingestion or they will continue with their care as usual (treatment-as-usual or TAU). The primary study outcome will be the percentage of weekly study urine drug tests that are negative for opiates between baseline and 12 weeks post-randomization. The secondary outcome will be engagement in treatment at week 12.
Medical Management of Sleep Disturbance During Opioid Tapering
Opioid DependenceOpioid Withdrawal1 moreThis study will evaluate whether a dual orexin-receptor antagonist approved by the FDA for sleep disturbance, suvorexant (SUVO; Belsomra), will increase total sleep time in patients with opioid use disorder (OUD) undergoing supervised withdrawal. This study is designed as a dose-finding study of SUVO compared to placebo. Briefly, OUD patients seeking supervised withdrawal will be admitted into a clinical research unit and stabilized onto buprenorphine for three days before being randomly assigned to study condition. All participants will then undergo a routine four-day buprenorphine taper, followed by a four-day post-taper phase. Participants will be randomized to receive either placebo, Low Dose SUVO, or High Dose SUVO and the investigators hypothesize that one or both doses of SUVO will improve total sleep time relative to placebo. Patients will attend a single follow-up session, 5-10 days following discharge.
Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Pain and Opioid Dependence in Methadone Maintenance Treatment
Chronic PainOpiate DependenceThis study involves the comparison of two treatment approaches for patients with chronic pain who are entering methadone maintenance treatment (MMT) for opioid addiction: (a) an integrated counseling that addresses both chronic pain and opioid dependence(POD)and (b) a counseling intervention that addresses opioid dependence only.
Study of the Treatment of Experimental Pain in Buprenorphine Maintained Persons With Chronic Musculoskeletal...
Opioid-Related DisordersChronic PainPain is very common in persons with a history of addiction, but few studies have examined the best treatment of pain in this population. This is a study to determine the pain relief provided by intravenous hydromorphone (Dilaudid) or buprenorphine given to persons maintained on stable doses of methadone or buprenorphine who have chronic musculoskeletal pain. Experimental sessions will require overnight stays on a residential research unit. In these sessions, persons will be exposed to standard experimental pain techniques at baseline and then rate the relief (if any) provided by the study medication when exposed to the same techniques. Persons will be asked to participate in 3 sessions, each separated by at least 7 days.