Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of this study is to see how well pioglitazone, when used with cognitive behavioral therapy, works at helping people who have recently stopped using cocaine to continue to not use cocaine.


Clinical Trial Description

Over one million American adults suffer from cocaine use disorder (CUD) with recent trends showing an increase in cocaine-related deaths since 2010. For the chronic cocaine user, significant changes in brain function and structure set the stage for relapse that, unfortunately, continues to be the most common outcome following treatment. For substance use disorders, cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is arguably the most empirically supported and widely used relapse prevention approach. Considered to be a cognitive control therapy, CBT aims to improve 'top-down' executive control functions that are impaired in CUD and strongly connected to relapse. Converging evidence suggests that CBT promotes meaningful changes in brain regions associated with cognitive control. Still, many patients with cognitive impairments show suboptimal response to CBT, bolstering the call for research aimed at improving effects with integrative treatments. The goal of this project is to enhance the relapse-prevention effects of CBT with adjunctive use of pioglitazone (PIO), a peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPAR-γ) agonist. Unlike traditional medications that target classic neurotransmitter systems, PIO's activation of the PPAR pathway confers broad spectrum anti-inflammatory and neuroprotective effects against insult to brain white matter (WM). The functional significance of WM in CUD has been well established by evidence showing that: (1) chronic cocaine exposure alters WM structural integrity; (2) WM alterations compromise cognitive function in CUD; and (2) better WM integrity predicts better CUD treatment outcome. In a recent proof of concept trial it was found that PIO significantly improved brain WM integrity in a small sample of non-abstinent patients with CUD. Treatment with PIO was well-tolerated and associated with reduced cocaine craving relative to placebo. Collectively, these findings raise the exciting possibility that PIO may augment responding to CBT via improved neural structure and cognitive function. A randomized double-blind clinical trial will be utilized to evaluate the efficacy of CBT with adjunctive PIO in recently abstinent patients during the early phase of recovery when craving is prominent, relapse risk is high, and intact cognitive control is required to actively maintain abstinence. Upon completion of a 5-day inpatient detoxification, 60 adults with CUD will complete titration to full dose of randomized medication, either PIO (45mg daily) or placebo, and begin 12 weeks of outpatient CBT treatment while continuing to receive study medication. Specific aims will examine the effects of PIO on targeted mechanisms of change (WM integrity, cognitive function, cocaine craving) and demonstrate evidence linking clinical efficacy (abstinence, functional health) with mechanism engagement. Expected results will establish PIO as an adjunctive treatment that can be integrated with CBT to reduce relapse risk following detoxification, thereby meeting NIDA's strategic priority of evaluating the use of medications to improve the efficacy of behavioral interventions (PA-18-055). ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04843046
Study type Interventional
Source The University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston
Contact Joy M Schmitz, PhD
Phone 713-486-2867
Email Joy.M.Schmitz@uth.tmc.edu
Status Recruiting
Phase Phase 2
Start date August 23, 2021
Completion date August 2025

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT03538548 - Treatment Outcome in CBT for Cocaine Use N/A
Recruiting NCT04994821 - tDCS to Reduce Craving in Cocaine Addiction- Phase 2 Study Phase 2
Not yet recruiting NCT06050304 - CRACK-TARGET 1: ÉTUDE DESCRIPTIVE DE LA SENSIBILISATION COMPORTEMENTALE OBSERVÉE et ATTENTES
Completed NCT02239913 - Topiramate-Phentermine Combinations for Cocaine Dependence Phase 1
Completed NCT02233647 - Phendimetrazine and Cocaine Early Phase 1
Recruiting NCT04927143 - Encouraging Abstinence Behavior in a Drug Epidemic Phase 2
Completed NCT03224546 - Cocaine Use Reduction and Health N/A
Recruiting NCT03656653 - Imagery-based Coping for Cocaine Use Disorder N/A
Completed NCT03348384 - [11C]NOP-1A and Cocaine Use Disorders Early Phase 1
Recruiting NCT05019430 - Cocaine and Zolmitriptan Early Phase 1
Recruiting NCT03344419 - Glutamatergic Modulation to Facilitate the Behavioral Treatment of Cocaine Use Disorders Phase 3
Recruiting NCT05507814 - Temporal Window and Episodic Future Thinking in CUD N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT03799341 - Neurocognitive Factors in Substance Use Treatment Response: The Ways of Rewarding Abstinence Project N/A
Completed NCT02798627 - Trial Of NS2359 For The Treatment of Cocaine Dependence Phase 2
Completed NCT02785406 - Role of the Orexin Receptor System in Stress, Sleep and Cocaine Use Phase 2
Completed NCT02444208 - A Feasibility Trial for Inhibitory-Control Training to Reduce Cocaine Use N/A
Recruiting NCT05902819 - Reconsolidation Blockade of Intrusive Trauma- and Cocaine-related Memories N/A
Recruiting NCT05833529 - Innovative Cognitive and Behavioral Psychotherapy for Cocaine Use Disorder N/A
Recruiting NCT05521854 - Contingency Management for Drug Use: Does Age Matter? N/A
Completed NCT05557149 - Virtual Reality Exposure and Respiratory Relaxation-Based Coping With Cocaine Craving in Cocaine Users N/A