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Opioid Use clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04550715 Active, not recruiting - Opioid Use Clinical Trials

Prevention Interventions for Opioid Misuse

Start date: January 4, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of the study is to develop and test innovative interventions to prevent the development of opioid misuse and opioid use disorders among older adolescents and young adults (AYA; ages 16-30) who use opioids, which will be initiated from a health care visit in the emergency department and extended post discharge via a telehealth approach. This study will have significant impact by identifying optimal, cost-effective opioid prevention strategies to sustain outcomes among AYAs.

NCT ID: NCT04503720 Active, not recruiting - Opioid Use Clinical Trials

CLoWI Versus PCA Morphine for Pain Control After Major Abdominal Surgery

CLoWI
Start date: December 1, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Major abdominal surgery is associated with significant complications which may lead to morbidity and mortality. Pain experienced after surgery affects the recovery from surgery. Our study aims to evaluate the current gold standard of PCA morphine infusion against a continuous wound infusion (CLoWI). The use of CLoWI negates the side-effects of opioids, and will be the first randomised controlled trial to compare PCA (Morphine) with CLoWI-LA (Ropivacaine).

NCT ID: NCT04494698 Active, not recruiting - Opioid Use Clinical Trials

Impact of DuoTherm on Opioid Use and Chronic Low Back Pain

Start date: June 23, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Evaluate opioid use and pain change in chronic Low Back Pain with DuoTherm Compared to Active Control

NCT ID: NCT04491175 Active, not recruiting - Low Back Pain Clinical Trials

Impact of DuoTherm on Acute Opioid Use and Low Back Pain

Start date: June 23, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Evaluate opioid use and pain change in acute Low Back Pain with DuoTherm Compared to TENS Therapy Unit

NCT ID: NCT04452344 Active, not recruiting - Opioid Use Clinical Trials

Opioid Analgesic Reduction Study

OARS
Start date: January 4, 2021
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The goal is to provide health care professionals, including dentists, with the best possible evidence for clinical decision making when deciding upon analgesics for acute post-surgical pain management, a double-blind, stratified randomized clinical trial will be conducted to test the hypothesis that a combination of over-the-counter non-opioid containing analgesics is at least as, if not more, effective (non-inferior) than the most commonly prescribed opioid analgesic. The impacted 3rd molar extraction model will be used due to the predictable severity of the post-operative pain and generalizability of results. This double-blind, prospective, stratified, randomized pragmatic clinical trial will use the impacted 3rd molar extraction pain model.

NCT ID: NCT04438746 Active, not recruiting - Chronic Pain Clinical Trials

Chronic Pain, Opioids, and Anger Treatment

Start date: July 1, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The current US opioid epidemic is a pressing public health concern. Links between opioid misuse and mortality are well-known; nearly 70% of all drug overdose deaths in 2017 were attributable to opioids. Given their pain-relieving properties, opioids have been widely used in the chronic pain population who are also susceptible to misuse of these analgesics.. In chronic pain patients with anger, the pain as well as opioid use may be aggravated. For example, suppression of anger has been linked with increased pain sensitivity in experiments, while anger-hostility scores and internalized anger predict pain severity variance and pain intensity, respectively. Anger is also linked with drug use/abuse, including opioids. The goal of this research is to implement a state-of-the-art program for anger regulation in chronic pain patients., Called Cognitive Behavioral Affective Therapy (CBAT), this program is evaluated on multiple measures of anger, sensory versus affective measures of pain, and measures of opioid misuse. CBAT is expected to reduce anger, and thereby produce reduction in pain as well as shift attitudes away from opioid misuse..

NCT ID: NCT04394559 Active, not recruiting - Opioid Use Clinical Trials

Prevention of Opioid Use Disorder After Surgery

Start date: July 2, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The objective of this study is to design, implement, and pilot test a multi-faceted intervention to support safer opioid prescribing, self-administration, and monitoring and reduce persistent opioid use and opioid use disorder for patients transitioning to the community setting after major orthopedic surgery. The multi-faceted intervention includes: 1) communication with outpatient providers and counseling of patients and caregivers at hospital discharge; 2) standardized opioid prescribing discharge order sets for each type of surgery; 3) an outpatient pain management follow-up visit embedded within routine post-operative care for managing pain and opioid use, and 4) a mobile patient-reported outcomes application for assessing pain, function, and possible development of opioid use disorder (OUD). The primary outcome will be persistent opioid use (in the 6 months after surgery) based on state-wide prescription data. Secondary outcomes will include the total morphine-equivalent dose of opioids prescribed at discharge; total post-operative opioids dispensed in the 6 months after surgery; and self-reported opioid misuse, pain and function 90 and 180 days after surgery.

NCT ID: NCT04263909 Active, not recruiting - Pain, Postoperative Clinical Trials

The Impact of Sublingual Sufentanil on Postoperative Pain and Analgesic Requirements in Spine Surgery Patients

Start date: December 1, 2020
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

In this study the investigators plan to examine the perioperative use of sufentanil sublingual (SL) in the analgesic regimen for spine surgery, one of the most common surgeries performed in the US. Patients undergoing spinal fusion surgery often experience severe pain during the first three postoperative days. Currently, no data are available for this patient population which routinely experiences moderate to severe acute pain. The investigators will analyze whether sufentanil SL is associated with lower opioid consumption in the post anesthesia care unit and pain scores.

NCT ID: NCT04247646 Active, not recruiting - Pain, Postoperative Clinical Trials

SLeep and OPioid UsE in Patients Undergoing Total Knee Arthroplasty

SLOPE
Start date: October 1, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Prescription opioid misuse and its associated negative effects have become an epidemic in the United States, and post-operative opioid use contributes to this terrible problem. Alternative strategies to opioid prescribing are thus highly sought after in the post-operative setting. Importantly, sleep and pain have a bi-directional relationship, and inadequate or impaired sleep regularly occur following orthopedic operations. Melatonin is an endogenous sleep hormone that can be administered exogenously, and that has been shown to have some potential as an analgesic agent. Here, using the premise that melatonin may improve sleep and pain in the post-operative setting, the investigators propose a randomized clinical trial in 120 participants undergoing total knee arthroplasties. Patients will be randomized to receive either sublingual melatonin 5 mg or matched placebo starting on post-operative day (POD) 0 and through POD . The investigators will measure post-operative opioid usage as the primary outcome, and post-operative pain scores as a secondary outcome. The primary safety outcome will be sedation level, as measured by the Richmond Agitation Sedation Scale (RASS). Sleep will be measured objectively using wrist-worn actigraphy. Participants will be followed through POD 28, and will also have baseline data on sleep, pain, and cognition obtained prior to surgery.

NCT ID: NCT04216719 Active, not recruiting - Opioid Use Clinical Trials

Facilitating Opioid Care Connections

Start date: March 18, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

In response to the opioid crisis in New York State (NYS), where the propose project will take place, the Unified Court System (UCS) developed a new treatment court model - the opioid court model (OCM) - designed around 10 practice guidelines to address the flaws of existing drug courts and reduce overdose (OD), opioid use disorder (OUD), and recidivism via rapid screening and linkage to medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD). In 2018, NYS began to expand the OCM across NYS. Yet, given the innovation of the OCM, the exact barriers to implementation in disparate counties with a range of resources - and the strategies to overcome them - are largely unknown. The research team proposes to integrate evidence-based implementation strategies to refine and evaluate the Opioid Court Model Rigorous Implementation Science for Effectiveness (OCM RISE) intervention, an implementation intervention that will allow the OCM, as framed by the 10 practice guidelines, to be scaled up across NYS.