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Clinical Trial Summary

Emerging evidence suggests that it is not the negative affect per se but underlying maladaptive cognitive, behavioral, and emotional responses to it that put an individual at risk of pathological substance use. Maladaptive reactivity to negative affect may account for the association between substance-use and emotional disorders and may contribute to poor treatment outcomes for Substance Use Disorder. Thus, teaching adolescents and young adults (herein referred to as "adolescents") skills to manage negative affect may improve therapeutic outcomes of treatment for substance use disorder. Cannabis-use disorder (CUD) among adolescents is a prevalent and growing public health concern. Maladaptive reactivity to negative affect contributes to the maintenance of CUD and accounts for the associations between symptoms of emotional disorders and cannabis use. Still, maladaptive reactivity to negative affect has not yet been targeted in an intervention for CUD. Thus, the overarching aim of this proposal is to develop and pilot test a treatment for CUD that emphasizes the reduction of maladaptive responding to negative affect in adolescents. Participants will be placed in either a standard cognitive behavioral therapy for CUD, or the proposed affective management therapy. The investigators hypothesize that affective management training will yield greater reductions in the participants' use of cannabis, as well as greater improvements to the participants' negative thoughts and emotions, compared to the standard cognitive behavioral therapy.


Clinical Trial Description

This project aims to develop and evaluate a behavioral intervention for adolescent cannabis use disorder that emphasizes adaptive responding to negative affective symptoms (e.g., depression, anxiety). Maladaptive cognitive, behavioral, and emotional reactions to negative affect are associated with substance use and substance use problems (including cannabis). Adolescence and young adulthood represents a developmental period in which the regulation of negative emotions is still being developed, as well as a time when cannabis use is prevalent and cannabis use disorders onset. Thus, developing and evaluating cannabis use disorder interventions that emphasize the improvement of responding to negative affect may be particularly important for this developmental period. First, the investigators developed an intervention that weaves skills and strategies for responding adaptively to negative affect, particularly as it relates to high-risk times for cannabis craving and use, into an evidence-based substance use disorder intervention for individuals in late adolescence and early adulthood. After delivering it to a small sample of participants, the investigators will gather feedback to guide refinements to the intervention. After refining the intervention, which will be a 12-session individual treatment, we will conduct the pilot randomized clinical trial. Participants (N = 80) aged 18-25 with cannabis use disorder and elevations in constructs representing maladaptive reactivity to negative affect (i.e., high anxiety sensitivity, low distress tolerance, or facets of emotion dysregulation including high emotional suppression and low cognitive reappraisal ability) will be randomized to receive either: (a) standard cognitive behavioral therapy for adolescent substance use disorders (SUD-CBT) or (b) the novel intervention we develop, affective management training for cannabis use disorders (CUD-AMT). Participants will be assessed at baseline, post-treatment, and a 6-month follow-up assessment on self-report and behavioral indices of the targeted mechanisms, as well as on substance use outcomes (both cannabis-specific and substances more broadly defined). A sub-set of participants (n = 50) will also undergo pre- and post-treatment fMRI assessment to evaluate whether neural indices of emotion regulation are improved to a greater extent in CUD-AMT compared to SUD-CBT. Cannabis use disorder is the most prevalent substance use disorder among adolescents and young adults, and often leads to the use of other substances. Negative affect and disorders associated with high negative affect (i.e., anxiety and unipolar mood disorders) are highly prevalent and associated with significant substance use disorder comorbidity. Targeting a process that is still malleable in late adolescence and young adulthood and that is associated with the maintenance of substance use disorders has the potential to reduce the burden of substance use disorders in this population, thus making a significant public health impact. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03432013
Study type Interventional
Source University of California, Los Angeles
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date February 15, 2018
Completion date June 30, 2021

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