Opioid-use Disorder Clinical Trial
Official title:
Emergency Department-Initiated Buprenorphine Validation Network Trial
This study will (1) recruit, train and provide resources to approximately 30 Emergency Department (ED) sites throughout the U.S. using implementation facilitation strategies to provide ED-initiated buprenorphine (BUP) for patients presenting with opioid use disorder (OUD) who are not receiving medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD). Once implementation is adequately achieved, the sites will (2) conduct a randomized controlled trial (RCT) to compare the effectiveness of sublingual buprenorphine (SL-BUP) versus extended-release buprenorphine (XR-BUP) on ED patients' engagement in formal addiction treatment 7-days after their ED visit. In addition, in an ancillary component of the study, the investigators will (3) assess the use of XR-BUP in ED patients with Clinical Opioid Withdrawal Scale (COWS) scores < 8 in a case series to potentially expand the eligibility of patients in the larger RCT to those presenting with little to no opioid withdrawal symptoms. Finally, the investigators will (4) develop and validate ED electronic health record (EHR) opioid-related phenotypes, both of which will inform the main RCT.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 2000 |
Est. completion date | July 31, 2024 |
Est. primary completion date | July 31, 2024 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility | RCT Component: Inclusion Criteria: 1. Be 18 years or older 2. Treated in the ED during study screening hours 3. Meet DSM-5 (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual) diagnostic criteria for moderate to severe OUD 4. Have a COWS score of > or equal to 4 5. Have a urine toxicology test that is positive for opioids (opiates, oxycodone, buprenorphine). Patients with urines that are only positive for fentanyl will be eligible if their clinical history and physical exam are consistent with opioid use and they meet DSM-5 criteria for moderate to severe OUD. 6. Able to speak English sufficiently to understand the study the study procedures and provide written informed consent to participate in the study. (Exception may be made if sites with large population of Spanish speaking patients are accepted for participation in the study and study materials are translated into Spanish. Translated study materials will be reviewed and approved by the Institutional Review Board) IRB of record prior to use.) Exclusion Criteria: 1. Have urine toxicology test that is positive for methadone 2. Be pregnant as determined by human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) testing at the index ED visit 3. Have a medical or psychiatric condition that requires hospitalization 4. Opioid administration (excluding BUP) at the index ED visit, prior to enrollment, and COWS remains < 8 during ED stay 5. Be actively suicidal or severely cognitively impaired precluding informed consent 6. Present from an extended care facility (e.g., skilled nursing facility) 7. Require continued prescription opioids for a pain condition 8. Be a prisoner or in police custody at the time of index ED visit 9. Be currently (anytime within the past 14 days) enrolled in formal addiction treatment, including by court order. Patients enrolled in formal addiction who are not receiving MOUD are eligible 10. Be unable to provide reliable locator information including 2 contact numbers in addition to their own 11. Be unwilling to follow study procedures (e.g., unwilling to provide permission to contact referral provider/program or unavailable for the follow-up assessments) 12. Have prior enrollment in the current study component Ancillary Component: Inclusion Criteria: 1. Be 18 years or older 2. Treated in the ED during study screening hours 3. Meet DSM-5 diagnostic criteria for moderate to severe opioid use disorder 4. Have a COWS <8 5. Have a urine toxicology test that is positive for opioids (opiates, oxycodone, or buprenorphine). Patients with urines that are only positive for fentanyl on the point of care test strip will be eligible if their clinical history and physical exam are consistent with opioid use and they meet DSM-5 criteria for moderate to severe OUD. 6. Be able to speak English sufficiently to understand the study procedures and provide written informed consent to participate in the study Exclusion Criteria: 1. Have a urine toxicology test that is positive for methadone 2. Be pregnant as determined by human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) testing at the index ED visit 3. Have a medical or psychiatric condition that requires hospitalization at the index ED visit, prior to enrollment 4. Be actively suicidal or severely cognitively impaired precluding informed consent 5. Present from an extended care facility (e.g., skilled nursing facility) 6. Require continued prescription opioids for a pain condition 7. Be a prisoner or in police custody at the time of index ED visit 8. Be currently (anytime within the past 7 days) enrolled in formal addiction treatment, including by court order. Patients enrolled in formal addiction treatment but are not receiving MOUD are eligible 9. Be unable to provide reliable locator information including 2 contact numbers in addition to their own 10. Be unwilling to follow study procedures (e.g., unwilling to provide permission to answer daily assessments until day 7) 11. Have prior enrollment in the current study |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Presybterian Hospital, Albuquerque, NM | Albuquerque | New Mexico |
United States | University of New Mexico Hospital | Albuquerque | New Mexico |
United States | Grady Memorial Hospital | Atlanta | Georgia |
United States | Johns Hopkins Hospital | Baltimore | Maryland |
United States | Cooper University Hospital | Camden | New Jersey |
United States | Medical University of South Carolina | Charleston | South Carolina |
United States | Northwestern Memorial Hospital | Chicago | Illinois |
United States | University of Chicago Medicine | Chicago | Illinois |
United States | Parkland Memorial Hospital | Dallas | Texas |
United States | Detroit Receiving Hospital | Detroit | Michigan |
United States | Henry Ford Hospital | Detroit | Michigan |
United States | Duke University | Durham | North Carolina |
United States | Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center | Lebanon | New Hampshire |
United States | West Virginia University - Berkeley Medical Center | Martinsburg | West Virginia |
United States | Jackson Memorial Hospital | Miami | Florida |
United States | Hennepin County Medical Center | Minneapolis | Minnesota |
United States | Vanderbilt University Medical Center | Nashville | Tennessee |
United States | Yale New Haven Health (Yale New Haven Hospital) | New Haven | Connecticut |
United States | Bellevue Hospital | New York | New York |
United States | Columbia University Irving Medical Center- NY Presbyterian | New York | New York |
United States | Icahn School of Medicine | New York | New York |
United States | Weill Cornell Medical College | New York | New York |
United States | Highland Hospital | Oakland | California |
United States | Pennsylvania Presbyterian Medical Center/Hospital of UPENN | Philadelphia | Pennsylvania |
United States | Temple University Hospital - Episcopal Campus | Philadelphia | Pennsylvania |
United States | Valleywise Health | Phoenix | Arizona |
United States | UPMC Mercy Hospital | Pittsburgh | Pennsylvania |
United States | Maine Medical Center | Portland | Maine |
United States | Rhode Island Hospital/The Miriam Hospital | Providence | Rhode Island |
United States | Barnes Jewish Hospital | Saint Louis | Missouri |
United States | University of Utah Hospital | Salt Lake City | Utah |
United States | San Leandro Hospital | San Leandro | California |
United States | University of Washington Medical Center- Harborview/Montlake | Seattle | Washington |
United States | Upstate Medical University | Syracuse | New York |
United States | Tampa General Hospital | Tampa | Florida |
United States | Wake Forest School of Medicine | Winston-Salem | North Carolina |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Yale University | Alameda Health System, Harvard Medical School (HMS and HSDM), Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network, National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), NYU Langone Health, The Emmes Company, LLC, University of Pennsylvania, Weill Medical College of Cornell University |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | RCT Component: Cost effectiveness of XR-BUP compared to SL-BUP using ICER (incremental cost-effectiveness ratio): Engagement | The final outcome measure for the cost-effectiveness analysis is the ICER (incremental cost-effectiveness ratio), which includes the relevant cost differential between the study arms in the numerator, and the difference in a chosen effectiveness measure in the denominator. 3 types of ICERs will be generated, each one with a different effectiveness measure (engagement in formal addiction treatment at 30 days; quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) gained; and Abstinent Years). The reason being that different ICERs are more relevant to certain potential stakeholder groups than others. | 7 days post randomization | |
Other | RCT Component: Cost effectiveness of XR-BUP compared to SL-BUP using ICER (incremental cost-effectiveness ratio): QALYs | The final outcome measure for the cost-effectiveness analysis is the ICER (incremental cost-effectiveness ratio), which includes the relevant cost differential between the study arms in the numerator, and the difference in a chosen effectiveness measure in the denominator. 3 types of ICERs will be generated, each one with a different effectiveness measure (engagement in formal addiction treatment at 30 days; quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) gained; and Abstinent Years). The reason being that different ICERs are more relevant to certain potential stakeholder groups than others. | 7 days post randomization | |
Other | RCT Component: Cost effectiveness of XR-BUP compared to SL-BUP using ICER (incremental cost-effectiveness ratio): Abstinent Years | The final outcome measure for the cost-effectiveness analysis is the ICER (incremental cost-effectiveness ratio), which includes the relevant cost differential between the study arms in the numerator, and the difference in a chosen effectiveness measure in the denominator. 3 types of ICERs will be generated, each one with a different effectiveness measure (engagement in formal addiction treatment at 30 days; quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) gained; and Abstinent Years). The reason being that different ICERs are more relevant to certain potential stakeholder groups than others. | 7 days post randomization | |
Other | RCT Component: Cost effectiveness of XR-BUP compared to SL-BUP using ICER (incremental cost-effectiveness ratio): Engagement | The final outcome measure for the cost-effectiveness analysis is the ICER (incremental cost-effectiveness ratio), which includes the relevant cost differential between the study arms in the numerator, and the difference in a chosen effectiveness measure in the denominator. 3 types of ICERs will be generated, each one with a different effectiveness measure (engagement in formal addiction treatment at 30 days; quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) gained; and Abstinent Years). The reason being that different ICERs are more relevant to certain potential stakeholder groups than others. | 30 days post randomization | |
Other | RCT Component: Cost effectiveness of XR-BUP compared to SL-BUP using ICER (incremental cost-effectiveness ratio): QALYs | The final outcome measure for the cost-effectiveness analysis is the ICER (incremental cost-effectiveness ratio), which includes the relevant cost differential between the study arms in the numerator, and the difference in a chosen effectiveness measure in the denominator. 3 types of ICERs will be generated, each one with a different effectiveness measure (engagement in formal addiction treatment at 30 days; quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) gained; and Abstinent Years). The reason being that different ICERs are more relevant to certain potential stakeholder groups than others. | 30 days post randomization | |
Other | RCT Component: Cost effectiveness of XR-BUP compared to SL-BUP using ICER (incremental cost-effectiveness ratio): Abstinent Years | The final outcome measure for the cost-effectiveness analysis is the ICER (incremental cost-effectiveness ratio), which includes the relevant cost differential between the study arms in the numerator, and the difference in a chosen effectiveness measure in the denominator. 3 types of ICERs will be generated, each one with a different effectiveness measure (engagement in formal addiction treatment at 30 days; quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs) gained; and Abstinent Years). The reason being that different ICERs are more relevant to certain potential stakeholder groups than others. | 30 days post randomization | |
Primary | RCT Component: Patient engagement (yes/no) in formal addiction treatment at 7 days post randomization | Engagement in formal addiction treatment will be defined as enrollment and receiving formal addiction treatment on the 7th day post randomization, confirmed by contact with the facility and/or treating clinician. Formal addiction treatment will be operationally defined as those treatments consistent with the American Society of Addiction Medicine's levels of care (1-4) and can include a range of clinical settings including office-based providers of BUP or naltrexone, opioid treatment programs (OTPs), intensive outpatient, inpatient, or residential treatments. Patients do not need to be receiving MOUD at 7 days to be considered engaged in formal addiction treatment. Participation in a mutual-help program such as Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) or (Narcotics Anonymous) NA alone will not be considered as engagement in formal addiction treatment. Additional analyses evaluating the effects of patient and site characteristics will also be conducted. | 7 days post randomization | |
Secondary | RCT Component: Engagement in MOUD (yes/no) at 7 days post randomization | self-report verified with treatment provider(s) | 7 days post randomization | |
Secondary | RCT Component: Patient engagement (yes/no) in formal addiction treatment at 30 days post randomization | Engagement in formal addiction treatment will be defined as enrollment in formal addiction treatment on the 30th day post randomization, confirmed by direct contact with the facility and/or treating clinician. Formal addiction treatment will be operationally defined as those treatments consistent with the American Society of Addiction Medicine's levels of care (1-4) and can include a range of clinical settings including office-based providers of BUP or naltrexone, OTPs, intensive outpatient, inpatient, or residential treatments. Patients do not need to be receiving MOUD on the 30th day post randomization to be considered engaged in formal addiction treatment. Participation in a mutual-help program such as Alcoholics or Narcotics Anonymous alone will not be considered as engagement in formal addiction treatment. Additional analyses evaluating the effects of patient and site characteristics will also be conducted. | 30 days post randomization | |
Secondary | RCT Component: Patient Engagement in MOUD (yes/no) at 30 days post randomization | self report verified with treatment provider(s) | 30 days post randomization | |
Secondary | RCT Component: Self-reported days of illicit opioid use (past 7 days) at 7 days post randomization | The Timeline Follow-back procedure will be used to elicit the patient participant's self-reported days of use of opioids. | 7 days post randomization | |
Secondary | RCT Component: Self-reported days of illicit opioid use (past 7 days) at 30 days post randomization | The Timeline Follow-back procedure will be used to elicit the patient participant's self-reported days of use of opioids. | 30 days post randomization | |
Secondary | RCT Component: Craving scores at 7 days post randomization | The investigators will use visual analogue scales (VAS) to assess craving, desire to use opioids and need to use opioids with a scale of 0-100. | 7 days post randomization | |
Secondary | RCT Component: Healthcare services utilization (past 30 days) regarding ED visits and hospitalizations at 30 days post randomization | A brief, structured interview regarding health care utilization (inpatient and outpatient) will be used, which collects information on the type and amount of services received. This includes ED visits, hospitalizations, primary medical care visits (excluding those for BUP treatment and self-help sources of support (e.g., NA). | 30 days post randomization | |
Secondary | RCT Component: Patient satisfaction with BUP at 7 days post randomization | The investigators will modify the patient satisfaction scale where overall experience is rated from 1 to 5 (1 is completely ineffective and 5 is completely effective) and treatment characteristics are rated 1 to 7 (1 is not important and 7 is extremely important) based on previous published data. | 7 days post randomization | |
Secondary | RCT Component: Overdose Events at 30 days post randomization | Assessment of past 30-day overdose events will be completed at 30 days post study enrollment. In addition, Site PIs will search local electronic medical records for fatal and non-fatal overdose events. | 30 days post randomization | |
Secondary | Ancillary Component: Proportion of participants that experience a 5 or greater increase in COWS score within 4 hours of of XR-BUP administration | Clinical Opiate Withdrawal Scale (COWS) - the COWS is a validated measure of the severity of opioid withdrawal that consists of 11 subjective and objective items. Scores on the individual items are combined to a single overall score that has been used to determine the SL-BUP induction strategy. COWS scoring, and interpretation is as follows: Score: 5-12 = mild opioid withdrawal; 13-24 = moderate opioid withdrawal; 25-36 = moderately severe opioid withdrawal; more than 36 = severe opioid withdrawal. | Within 4 hours of XR-BUP administration | |
Secondary | Ancillary Component: Proportion of participants that transition to moderate withdrawal (COWS 13-24) within 4 hours of XR-BUP administration | Clinical Opiate Withdrawal Scale (COWS) - the COWS is a validated measure of the severity of opioid withdrawal that consists of 11 subjective and objective items. Scores on the individual items are combined to a single overall score that has been used to determine the SL-BUP induction strategy. COWS scoring, and interpretation is as follows: Score: 5-12 = mild opioid withdrawal; 13-24 = moderate opioid withdrawal; 25-36 = moderately severe opioid withdrawal; more than 36 = severe opioid withdrawal. | Within 4 hours of XR-BUP administration | |
Secondary | Ancillary Component: Proportion of participants that experience clinician determined precipitated withdrawal within 1 hour of XR-BUP administration | Assessment of Proportion of participants that experience clinician determined precipitated withdrawal within 1 hour of XR-BUP administration. | Within 1 hour post XR-BUP injection |
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