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Addiction clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT03538652 Recruiting - Addiction Clinical Trials

Just-In-Time Adaptive Interventions for Addictive Behaviors

Start date: February 19, 2020
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Background: Many smartphone apps intend to help people with addictions. But not enough is known about how they should work. Researchers want to study an app that gives people the advice they need, just when they need it. This is a JITAI. It stands for Just-In-Time Adaptive Intervention. To create a good JITAI, researchers need to know what approaches work best at different moments. Objective: To develop ways to treat addiction with a smartphone app. Eligibility: Adults ages 18-75 who use heroin or other opioids Design: Participants will be screened in another protocol. Participants will visit a Baltimore clinic 3 days a week to give urine and breath samples. Some participants will get their treatment at this clinic. Participants will answer questions about their personality and stress. Participants will randomly be assigned to the JITAI group or a comparison group. Participants will have a training session on using the smartphone app. JITAI participants will also watch a video about the written messages they ll see in the app. Weeks 3-10: participants will carry a smartphone. Four times a day, it will beep and ask questions. These will be about the participant s activities and mood. The JITAI group will see a short message after. The message is meant to be helpful. For the first 16 evenings, JITAI participants will get more information on the phone. Answers to the app s questions will be transferred automatically from the smartphone to secure computers at the NIH. During the last week, participants can choose the kind of messages they see. Week 11: participants will return the smartphone and answer questions. Weeks 12-16, participants who are getting their medicine from the research clinic will be encouraged to transfer to other clinics. Otherwise, they will have their dose slowly reduced to zero.

NCT ID: NCT03500835 Active, not recruiting - Pediatric Obesity Clinical Trials

An Addiction-Based Mobile Health Weight Loss Intervention With Coaching

Start date: January 1, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

New and creative approaches are needed to address childhood obesity. Current strategies result in suboptimal outcomes and are intensive and costly. It has been theorized that overeating, may have addictive qualities, although few weight management interventions have tested therapeutic techniques founded on addiction medicine principles, such as, withdrawal, tolerance and craving control1, 2. A pilot study utilizing an addiction model based mobile health (mHealth) weight-loss intervention in adolescents showed that the app intervention reduced BMI Z-score (zBMI) to a greater extent than youth participating in an in-clinic multidisciplinary weight management intervention, and appeared to be a cost-effective, labor efficient method for adolescent weight management. The proposed multi-site randomized control trial (RCT) will test the effectiveness of an addiction-based weight loss intervention, embodied first as a smartphone app with telephone coaching and second as an identical approach phone-coaching alone intervention compared to age matched controls participating in an in-clinic weight management interventions in a larger sample of economically, racially and ethnically diverse adolescents (ages 14-18). One hundred and eighty adolescents will be recruited from pediatric interdisciplinary weight management clinics operating out of five different hospital systems in Southern California and through targeted mailing to 40 ethnically, racially and economically diverse neighborhoods in Los Angeles County. The adolescents will be randomized 1:1 via stratified block randomization to either receive 1) interactive addiction model based mobile health (mHealth) weight-loss intervention with personalized phone-coaching (AppCoach), 2) interactive addiction model based mHealth weight-loss intervention alone (App) or 3) Multidisciplinary in-clinic weight management program (Clinic). Assessment of the intervention's effect on zBMI and percent over the 95th percentile (%BMIp95), fasting metabolic parameters, addictive eating habits, executive function, and motivation for change will be obtained at enrollment, 3, 6, 12 and 18 months (1 year post intervention follow up). In addition, a real-life economic analysis (cost, cost-saving and non-monetary benefits) analysis will be completed comparing AppCoach to 1) App and 2) Clinic. We will further explore whether primary and secondary outcomes differ by race and whether race moderates the relationship between initial intervention efficacy and prolonged weight maintenance.

NCT ID: NCT03483220 Completed - Addiction Clinical Trials

Emotional Regulation, Impulsivity in Cannabis Its Relation to MRI Brain Structure

Start date: March 1, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

cannabis addiction is a major health hazard that has its effect on personality and behavior including the impulsivity and emotional regulation. It also has its effect on both the structure and function of different brain regions involved in brain reward system. the aim of the study is to study the emotional regulation and impulsivity among people with cannabis addiction studying the change in the volume of brain reward system structures' volume in relation to cannabis addiction and the change in the mentioned behavioral traits.

NCT ID: NCT03462797 Completed - Addiction Clinical Trials

Opioid Physiology Project

OPP
Start date: August 14, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The current project seeks to explore the use of emergent biosensor technology to detect opioid use. The investigators goal is to recruit 60 opioid naïve patients presenting at the College of Dentistry at UTHSC. Candidate participants must be scheduled for an upcoming dental procedure that will involve subsequent pain management using oral opioid medication. Participants will be consented prior to any study procedures. All participant information from this study will be kept strictly confidential (e.g., no individual data will be shared with the College of Dentistry).

NCT ID: NCT03452800 Recruiting - Addiction Clinical Trials

Addiction Among Mental Health Professionals

Start date: February 1, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Our goal is to determine the representations of addiction among caregivers working in the field of mental health. We hypothesize that caregivers, despite their investment in care, have a negative social representation of patients suffering from addictive disorders, which could be related to a lack of training on the pathology and its social repercussions.

NCT ID: NCT03424616 Recruiting - Addiction Clinical Trials

Deep Brain Stimulation of Nucleus Accumbens for Opioid Relapse Prevention

Start date: February 6, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Nucleus accumbens plays important roles in the process of opiate addiction and initial of relapse after detoxification.According to the single-centered preliminary open-labeled prospective trial results, the investigators hypothesize that bilateral stimulation of the NAc will effectively reduce the relapse of the opiate dependence.

NCT ID: NCT03412669 Completed - Addiction Clinical Trials

The Preliminary Evaluation of Supporting Addiction Affected Families Effectively

Start date: May 8, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Background: Burden in addiction-affected families is a huge problem (well over 100 million family members worldwide are affected by substance use of a relative), largely unrecognised and untreated. Affected family members (AFMs) are vulnerable to physical and mental ill-health, reduced quality of relationships in the family, and family violence. In India, the burden of alcohol use is increasing: attitudes regarding alcohol use and alcohol availability, consumption patterns, age of drinking onset, levels of heavy drinking and alcohol-related problems, are all changing for the worse. These changes to levels of alcohol consumption and problems will have caused a corresponding increase in the prevalence of AFMs, although they are largely a hidden group. Yet, despite clear evidence of the burden of alcohol use on families, there is a lack of adequate support and targeted services for them. The objective of our study is to examine the preliminary effectiveness, feasibility and acceptability of Supporting Addiction Affected Families Effectively (SAFE) versus Enhanced Usual Care (EUC) in improving clinical outcomes. Methods: Our study is a parallel arm Pilot Randomised Controlled Trial of a psychosocial intervention for family members affected by a relative's alcohol use, in Goa, India. 100 AFMs will be recruited by referrals from community gatekeepers and professionals, and self-referrals resulting from media coverage of the study and and word-of-mouth publicity. Those who consent will be allocated in a 1:1 ratio to receive either SAFE (counselling) or EUC (information sheet). SAFE will be delivered by lay counsellors over 5 sessions spread across a month and a half, and EUC will consist of an information sheet on alcohol use, its nature, impact and treatment. The primary outcome is mean difference in 'symptoms' scores assessed by the Symptom Rating Test (at 3 months). Secondary outcomes are mean differences in 'coping' scores assessed by the Coping Questionnaire, 'impact' scores assessed by the Family Member Impact Questionnaire, and 'support' scores assessed by the Alcohol, Drugs and the Family Social Support Scale (at 3 months). The primary analyses will be intention-to-treat at the 3-month end-point. Discussion: Our study will aid the process of translational research, by adopting frameworks that have an established evidence base, and implementing these frameworks in a culturally appropriate manner to newer underserved populations.

NCT ID: NCT03366909 Not yet recruiting - Addiction Clinical Trials

Mindfulness Meditation and Cannabis Dependence : Therapy Effectiveness

MACBETH
Start date: May 1, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Cannabis use can lead to addiction in about 5 to 10 % of users in France. Currently, behavioral interventions are the most dependable but effectiveness is still reduced. Mindfulness meditation has demonstrated an effectiveness in several meta analysis (anxiety and depressive disorder) and seems to be relevant to reduce anxious and impulsive symptoms found in cannabis use disorders. This study proposes to determinate the mindfulness effectiveness in reduction of cannabis use in regular consumer. The consumption decrease is estimated with a retrospective diary, TLFB (Timeline Follow Back) which collect cannabis use every week until the 12th. Urine (week 0/baseline, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12) and hair (week 0/baseline, 10) analyses are regularly effected. Patients included in control group get classic cares in an addictology center in CHRU of Nancy. Patients included in mindfulness group receive one session a week during eight weeks (MBRP protocol : Mindfulness -Based Relapse Prevention). The study process goes on for 12 weeks. An ancillary study measures the impact of cannabis decreases on retinal electrophysiological and architectural markers, usually disturbed by cannabis uses.

NCT ID: NCT03347643 Completed - Addiction Clinical Trials

The Effectiveness of tDCS on Internet Game Addiction

Start date: September 22, 2017
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

In this study, the investigators aimed to investigate the effect of transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) on clinical status of Internet game addiction. The clinical status of Internet game addiction includes severity of addiction symptom, subjective craving for gaming, response inhibition and cue reactivity. The investigators hypothesized that real stimulation with tDCS on the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex will have higher effectiveness on severity of addiction symptom, subjective craving for gaming, response inhibition and cue reactivity rather than sham stimulation with tDCS.

NCT ID: NCT03260296 Not yet recruiting - Addiction Clinical Trials

Smartphones Addiction in Assiut University Students

Start date: October 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Smartphones have become a part of our daily life, the number of people using smartphones is increasing day after day. Easy access to internet is the main advantage of smartphones in comparison to traditional mobile phones, so they are considered as handheld convenient substitutes to computers. People use smartphones for many different purposes such as communication, entertainment, browsing for information, education or business facilitation. Unfortunately the excessive use of smartphones makes people 'addicted' to that type of technology. Past research has shown that older people have less positive attitudes towards a variety of technologies and they are less likely than younger people to embrace new technology, so It seems that the problem of smartphones addiction is most likely to affect young people who are fascinated with new technologies.