View clinical trials related to Alcohol Use Disorder.
Filter by:The present study is dedicated to empowering individuals close to an addicted person (i.e. concerned significant others, CSOs) to create changes in their family environment: changes that increase the likelihood of the addicted person seeking treatment. The Danish National Clinical Guideline for the treatment of alcohol dependence recommends that alcohol treatment centers offer interventions aimed at CSOs, providing them with the support and empowerment that will enable them to motivate the problem drinker to enter treatment. In the US, the Community Reinforcement and Family Training (CRAFT) intervention has been shown to offer the most effective support to CSOs. CRAFT has consistently demonstrated a two to three times' higher impact on getting individual with an alcohol use disorder (AUD) to attend treatment, compared to other kinds of interventions. Studies of the intervention so far have, however, been small, and the format used in the delivery of CRAFT has not been fully investigated. The aim of the present cluster randomized controlled trial is to implement and investigate CRAFT in a Danish context and with sufficient sample size. Consecutive CSOs will through cluster randomization be randomized to receive either CRAFT in a group format, CRAFT in an individual format, or a control condition, consisting of self-help material only. The primary outcome of the study will be the rate of individuals with AUD entering treatment following the intervention targeted at the CSOs within three months from its initiation. Data will be collected from all CSOs at baseline, three, and six months after baseline.
Background: Alcohol use disorders represent a major health burden. Efforts aiming at reducing alcohol-related harm include early detection of those with risky drinking habits as well detection of early relapse in patients with alcohol dependence who are detoxified and committed to abstinence. Recently, ethyl glucuronide has been proved to be a good biomarker for the detection of recent drinking. However, to date, no randomized diagnostic trial has tested its impact on drinking outcomes. The aim of this study was to assess, with a randomized design, the implications of ethyl glucuronide screening on alcohol outcomes, compared to screening with a low-sensitivity biomarker such as ethanol. Methods: alcohol dependent outpatients were randomized to either 24 weeks of continuous screening with ethyl glucuronide or ethanol. Patients were aware of screening methods and results. After 24 weeks, all participants were screened with ethyl glucuronide. Self-reports were also gathered. A logistic regression model was performed comparing the rate of ethyl glucuronide positive results at study end between groups. Generalized estimating equations were performed to evaluate the descending rate of EtG positive patients in the EtG group, measured month to month.
This is a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, crossover design trial tested the effect of lacosamide on alcohol self-administration and craving following a priming dose of alcohol. The specific objective of this study was to determine whether lacosamide, a novel anticonvulsant that is FDA-approved for treating partial seizures, has effects on alcohol craving and consumption.
The purpose of this study is to look at the safety of a study treatment with stem cells in Alcohol Use Disorder And Major Depression (AUD-MD) subjects.
This project aims to help Veterans who are in medical treatment and have untreated alcohol problems. First, the investigators adapted a Decision Aid that explains alcohol-related treatment options and their risks and benefits. Then, the investigators are determining the effectiveness of an intervention called DO-MoST (for Drinking Options-Motivate, Shared Decisions, Telemonitor), whereby a Decision Coach helps Veterans make decisions about alcohol-related behaviors and treatments they prefer, and keeps in contact by phone to continue to help with drinking and treatment decisions. DO-MoST is designed to increase rates at which Veterans decide to reduce or quit drinking, and begin and remain in treatment, and to improve drinking- and medical-related outcomes over time. It may also decrease Veterans' use of expensive health services such as hospitalizations and emergency visits. Finally, the investigators will study how VA can use DO-MoST on an ongoing, more widespread basis. The project should increase patient-centered health care for Veterans with alcohol problems to benefit their recovery.
The proposed protocol is an 8 week open label outpatient pilot trial of the safety and efficacy of pregabalin (Lyrica) in the treatment of alcohol use disorder. The primary objective of the study is to determine the efficacy of pregabalin in promoting alcohol abstinence among individuals with an alcohol use disorder.
The goal of the proposed project is to begin rigorous study of the clinically relevant effects of non-psychoactive phytocannabinoid cannabidiol (CBD) in patients with severe alcohol use disorder (AUD). This double-blind, randomized proof-of-concept study (n = 40) is designed to assess feasibility and contrast effects of extended (8 weeks) treatment with CBD to those of placebo in AUD patients. Participants with AUD will be randomized to receive either placebo or 600mg CBD/day (PO) for 4 weeks, immediately followed by 1200mg CBD/day (PO) for an additional 4 weeks (8 total weeks). These doses were chosen to reproduce serum CBD levels reported to reduce alcohol-seeking behavior in animal studies. Measures will include circulating levels of CBD, safety measures (THC serum levels, adverse events, cognitive and motoric function), and physiological and psychological domains relevant to AUD (including self-reported craving, depression, and anxiety, and responses to personalized scripts designed to elicit stress- and cue-induced craving and anxiety). Assessments will be conducted following 1 day, 1 week, and 4 weeks of treatment with each dose of CBD vs. placebo, and 1 and 4 weeks after the cessation of treatment. Drinking outcomes across 8 weeks of treatment and 4 weeks of follow-up will also be assessed as an exploratory outcome.
This project aims to determine whether cannabidiol (CBD), a compound derived from the cannabis plant, is effective in treating alcohol use disorder (AUD) in individuals with comorbid posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Investigators will test the hypothesis that oral cannabidiol (CBD) will reduce alcohol drinking in individuals with AUD comorbid with PTSD. To test this hypothesis, 48 otherwise healthy adult participants with moderate or severe AUD and PTSD will be randomized to treatment with either CBD (600 mg daily) or placebo, for a period of 6 weeks, such that both participants and study staff are blind to treatment condition. Participants (each treated for 6 weeks) will be continuously recruited over a study period of 14 months until 48 have completed. Baseline and weekly data will be collected on alcohol usage and PTSD symptoms, and investigators will assess whether CBD treatment leads to a greater improvement in these measures relative to placebo, and whether reduction in alcohol drinking is temporally linked to improvement in PTSD symptoms. Subjects will also participate in a task designed to quantify the psychological and physiological links between negative emotion produced by re-experiencing PTSD trauma, and alcohol craving. The task will be administered following 4 weeks of treatment. Treatment-associated reduction in alcohol craving elicited by trauma-associated negative emotion between CBD and placebo groups will be compared. This study will be the first to test whether CBD is effective in treating alcohol addiction and in treating PTSD in humans, and the first to examine the interaction between these treatment effects. Results will serve as proof of concept and provide guidance for a future larger clinical trial. Because CBD is a safe, readily available drug, such a trial would have an immense potential to prevent death, medical illness, and psychological suffering associated with AUD and PTSD. Further, because the brain circuits via which CBD acts to produce hypothesized effects are relatively well-understood, results may substantially advance understanding of the neurobiological basis of alcohol addiction.
The objective of this proposal is to advance medication development for alcohol use disorder by examining the efficacy and mechanisms of action of minocycline, a neuroimmune modulator, as a potential treatment. This study has important clinical implications, as the available treatments for alcohol use disorder are only modestly effective and testing novel medications is a high research priority.
Alcohol use disorder, or heavy drinking, is commonly seen in patients who present to trauma centers. These patients are at risk for Alcohol Withdrawal Syndrome (AWS), which is collection of symptoms that can range from anxiety and restlessness to seizures, delirium and even death. The Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment (CIWA) tool is routinely used to assess alcohol withdrawal symptoms. Benzodiazepines (BZD) are commonly administered to trauma patients who exhibit symptoms of AWS based on the CIWA scoring system. Although these medications have proven efficacy, they can also have negative side effects which may affect recovery. Valprate (VPA) is a medication which may have efficacy in management of AWS symptoms, thus ameliorating or preventing the need for BZD administration. This trial will study the effectiveness of VPA in the prevention of AWS symptoms by comparing the amount of BZD use in trauma patients who receive BZD treatment as indicated by CIWA scores with patients who receive prophylactic VPA therapy in addition to BZD as indicated by CIWA scores.