Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The over-arching goal of the proposed project is to understand the impact of medication adherence upon engagement in behavioral treatment for alcohol use disorders. The proposed project is a pilot feasibility study of inpatient veterans with problem alcohol use at the William S. Middleton VA Hospital (Madison, WI). Participants will be randomized to one of two parallel study conditions: (1) an initial 50 mg oral dose of naltrexone prior to hospital discharge plus a 30-day prescription for oral naltrexone, or (2) a single 380 mg intramuscular injection of naltrexone administered prior to discharge and a second injection one month later. The central hypothesis is that hospital-administered injectable naltrexone, when compared to daily oral naltrexone taken at home, will reduce alcohol use in the days immediately following hospitalization. Injectable naltrexone has been efficacious vs. placebo in addition to behavioral treatment in several studies. However, it has yet to be examined in head-to-head comparison with oral naltrexone, or in the hospital setting as an intervention that might facilitate behavioral treatment follow up after discharge.


Clinical Trial Description

The proposed project is a pilot feasibility study of inpatient veterans with problem alcohol use at the William S. Middleton VA Hospital. The over-arching goal is to understand the impact of medication adherence upon engagement in behavioral treatment for alcohol use disorders. Participants will be randomized to one of two parallel study conditions: (1) an initial 50 mg oral dose of naltrexone prior to hospital discharge plus a 30-day prescription for oral naltrexone, or (2) a single 380 mg intramuscular injection of naltrexone (duration of action = 30 days) administered prior to discharge followed by a second injection one month later. The central hypothesis is that hospital-administered, long-acting injectable naltrexone, when compared to daily oral naltrexone, will reduce alcohol use in the days immediately following hospitalization. This reduced consumption, we hypothesize, will be followed by improved engagement in substance abuse treatment.

Primary Aim: Demonstrate the feasibility of the proposed recruitment methods and study design. This aim comprises two measures with corresponding goals: (1) Recruitment/enrollment—with a recruitment goal of 50 eligible and consenting subjects in an 8 month time period, and (2) Follow-up data collection with a goal of post-hospitalization follow-up data on no less than 70% of enrolled subjects.

Secondary Aims: As a pilot feasibility study, we may not anticipate sufficient power to attain statistical significance on patient-oriented outcome measures. However, it will be important for us to consider and to evaluate pertinent outcomes and potential moderators in order to (1) develop and fine-tune study design, and (2) determine effect sizes for primary outcomes so that we may calculate appropriate sample sizes for future larger study. As such, the secondary aims for the current study are:

1. To compare injectable naltrexone study to oral naltrexone in terms of attendance to recommended outpatient substance abuse treatment. We hypothesize that injectable naltrexone will be associated with improved likelihood of attending initial visits for substance abuse treatment.

2. To compare study arms in terms of ongoing alcohol consumption. We hypothesize that (1) improved medication adherence in the oral naltrexone arm and (2) assignment to injectable naltrexone will be associated with reduced alcohol consumption (number of heavy drinking days in the past 14 days) following hospital discharge. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT01856712
Study type Interventional
Source University of Wisconsin, Madison
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Phase 3
Start date May 2013
Completion date January 2016

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT03340051 - Remote Alcohol Monitoring and Episodic Thinking N/A
Completed NCT02901041 - Interdisciplinary Study of A Novel Anticonvulsant in Alcoholism Phase 3
Not yet recruiting NCT06444243 - Psilocybin-assisted Therapy for Alcohol Use Disorder Phase 2
Completed NCT02705898 - Lifestyle Physical Activity Intervention for Depressed Alcohol Dependent Women N/A
Completed NCT02486900 - Neurofeedback & Alcohol Dependence N/A
Completed NCT02179749 - Mifepristone Treatment of Alcohol Use Disorder Phase 2
Completed NCT02197598 - Treatment of Patients Suffering of Alcohol Dependence and Impaired Liver Function With Selincro® As-needed Use Phase 4
Recruiting NCT02385643 - The Efficacy of A Smartphone-based Support System to Reinforce Alcohol Abstinence in Treatment-seeking Patients N/A
Completed NCT01828866 - Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) in Alcohol Dependent Patients N/A
Terminated NCT01408641 - Topiramate for Alcohol Use in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT01182766 - New Treatment for Alcohol and Nicotine Dependence Phase 2/Phase 3
Completed NCT01342549 - Treatment Strategy for Alcohol Use Disorders in Veterans With TBI Phase 3
Completed NCT02193204 - Chronic Alcohol, Stress Inflammatory Response and Relapse Risk N/A
Completed NCT01165541 - A Study of Quetiapine and Mirtazapine for the Treatment of Alcohol Dependency Phase 2
Completed NCT01176591 - HBPL Study of the Impact of the NK1 Antagonist Aprepitant Phase 2
Completed NCT01056484 - Mindfulness Meditation for Health Phase 2
Completed NCT00585780 - Prazosin to Reduce Stress-Induced Alcohol/Drug Craving and Relapse Phase 1/Phase 2
Completed NCT00607620 - Disseminating Organizational SBI Services at Trauma Centers N/A
Completed NCT00884884 - Aripiprazole and Topiramate on Free-Choice Alcohol Use Phase 2/Phase 3
Completed NCT00463346 - Treatment With Acamprosate in Patients With Schizophrenia and Comorbid Alcoholism Phase 3