Clinical Trials Logo

Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD).

Filter by:

NCT ID: NCT05064228 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD)

Mobile Rewarding Activity Centered Treatment

mReACT
Start date: September 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) is a highly prevalent and significant public health problem. Behavioral treatments based in the principles of social learning theory and cognitive behavior therapy have been developed and tested for AUD, yet effect sizes are relatively small and rates of relapse following treatment are high. Theoretically informed adjunctive interventions may help to enhance the effects of extant AUD treatments. In particular, evidence suggests that environments lacking in substance-free (SF) activities contribute to the development and maintenance of AUD and that the availability of rewarding SF activities may serve as viable alternatives to compete with alcohol use. Building on the advantages of accessibility and low-cost option afforded by the use of mobile technology, this proposal outlines a well-integrated research and training plan to investigate a mobile health intervention to increase engagement in rewarding SF activities among patients in AUD treatment. This proposed research aims to develop and evaluate a mobile phone ecological momentary assessment plus ecological momentary intervention (EMA+EMI; entitled: mobile - Rewarding Activity Centered Treatment (m-ReACT)) app to augment existing AUD treatment. The m-ReACT app will monitor self-reported rewarding SF activity engagement in real-time and deliver personalized feedback that encourages participants to engage in highly rewarding activities that are goal-oriented and support positive treatment outcomes. This proposed intervention will be developed in two phases. Phase 1 will develop the m-ReACT app and Phase 2 will evaluate its efficacy in randomized control pilot trial with a sample of 50 AUD patients who have recently initiated outpatient AUD treatment. Participants in the pilot RCT will be randomly assigned to either the m-ReACT condition or an active control condition. It is hypothesized that m-ReACT will result in increased rates of percent days of alcohol abstinence and increased reinforcement from SF activities.

NCT ID: NCT05021640 Completed - Clinical trials for Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD)

Study of DCR-AUD in Healthy Volunteers

Start date: September 21, 2021
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

DCR-AUD will be evaluated for safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics in healthy volunteers.

NCT ID: NCT05015881 Recruiting - Alcohol Drinking Clinical Trials

Relationship Between Brain and Heart Glucose Metabolism in Alcohol Use Disorder

Start date: November 1, 2021
Phase: Phase 2/Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this study is to learn more about how a nutritional supplement "ketone ester" (deltaG ®) has an effect on brain and heart function and on alcohol consumption in individuals with and without alcohol use disorder. The study will use Fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) Positron Emission Tomography/Computed Tomography (PET/CT) scans after a single dose of ketone ester or Placebo in 10 people with alcohol use disorder and 10 healthy control volunteers.

NCT ID: NCT04998916 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Alcohol Use Disorder

MPFC Theta Burst Stimulation as a Treatment Tool for Alcohol Use Disorder: Effects on Drinking and Incentive Salience

Start date: July 6, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to develop transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), specifically TMS at a frequency known as theta burst stimulation (TBS), to see how it affects the brain and changes the brain's response to alcohol-related pictures. TMS and TBS are stimulation techniques that use magnetic pulses to temporarily excite specific brain areas in awake people (without the need for surgery, anesthetic, or other invasive procedures). TBS, which is a form of TMS, will be applied over the medial prefrontal cortex, (MPFC), which has been shown to be involved with drinking patterns and alcohol consumption. This study will test whether TBS can be used as an alternative tool to reduce the desire to use alcohol and reducing the brain's response to alcohol-related pictures.

NCT ID: NCT04985786 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD)

Dynamics of Risk Perception and Risk Behavior in Alcohol Use Disorder and Schizophrenia

PathRisk
Start date: July 10, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The hyper- or hypo-attribution of risks is deeply related to the core pathological mechanisms of mental disorders and at the same time engaging in risky behaviors influences their course and outcomes. The investigators study risk perception, risk behaviors and underlying brain mechanisms in a longitudinal design in three groups of psychiatric patients who participate in a psychological intervention that is aimed to reduce risk behavior and increase risk perception. Patients with schizophrenia (SZ), alcohol use disorder (AUD) and both disorders (SZ + AUD) are recruited during psychiatric in-patient treatment and participate in a combined face-to-face and mobile intervention that starts before release and ends four weeks after discharge. The standardized 4-session face-to-face group intervention that is based on motivational interviewing (Miller & Rollnick, 2013) and relapse prevention (Marlatt & Donovan, 2005) and addresses the reduction of disorder-specific risk behaviors, i.e. alcohol use for AUD and SZ+AUD and medication non-adherence for SZ. After discharge, a 4-week ecological momentary intervention (EMI) supports participants to maintain abstinence from risk behaviors and to strengthen coping in high-risk situations relying on mental contrasting and implementation intentions (Oettingen & Gollwitzer, 2011). Participants will be assessed in fMRI and behavioral measurements and by self-report pre and post interventional phase, furthermore they participate in an ecological momentary assessment during the post-discharge phase which assesses risk behaviors, high-risk situations and risk perception in real life contexts.

NCT ID: NCT04979507 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD)

Sleep and Emotional Reactivity in Alcohol Use Disorder

SEAS
Start date: June 9, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is a multifaceted, chronic relapsing disorder suffered by millions of men and women in the United States. AUD is associated with disrupted sleep continuity and architecture, which impact health-related quality of life, and contribute to relapse. However, many alcohol-sleep interactions and their underlying mechanisms remain unclear, especially those involving AUD and chronic sleep problems. Rapid eye movement (REM) sleep is altered long into abstinence, with excess duration and intensity of REM sleep, which is a predictor of relapse. Emotion deficits, including affective flattening and mesocorticolimbic hypo-responsiveness to emotional stimuli, are also consistent findings in AUD and predictors of relapse. Here, our investigators bring these two components together, building on an emerging literature showing that REM sleep is important for neural emotion regulation, calibrating emotions to promote next-day adaptive emotional functioning. Our investigators propose that the REM sleep-emotion pathway is dysfunctional in AUD, contributing to the deficits in emotion regulation in AUD shown by us and others, which could then lead to increased craving and relapse. Our investigators study male and female AUD patients compared to age- and gender-matched healthy controls, using 2 within-subject sleep conditions: uninterrupted sleep; selective REM sleep reduction, followed by functional neuroimaging with emotion reactivity and regulation tasks the following morning. Our investigators aim to determine specific effects of experimental REM sleep reduction on next-day neural emotional reactivity in AUD compared to healthy controls and compared to a night of uninterrupted sleep

NCT ID: NCT04974645 Completed - Clinical trials for Substance Use Disorders

Pilot: Digital Therapeutic vs Education for the Management of Problematic Substance Use

Start date: November 3, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Prior to launching a randomized controlled trial, this pilot study will investigate the feasibility and acceptability of the administration of a diagnostic interview and collection of a biomarker test, as well as engagement and preliminary efficacy with W-SUDs and the education arm, among a sample of adults who screen positive for problematic substance use.

NCT ID: NCT04958655 Completed - Clinical trials for Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD)

Mental Imagery Intervention for Alcohol Craving

ACLIMAGE
Start date: September 20, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

A within-subjects crossover, randomised controlled trial conducted at a specialist NHS outpatient addictions clinics to determine if mental imagery (of future positive [recovery oriented] events) and a visuospatial task (playing Tetris) can help reduce cue-induced alcohol craving. Effects of both interventions will be compared.

NCT ID: NCT04927364 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation

Examining the Effectiveness of Deep TMS in Veterans With Alcohol Use Disorder

Start date: September 6, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study aims to evaluate the efficacy of deep transcranial magnetic stimulation (dTMS) as a treatment for Veterans with an alcohol use disorder (AUD).

NCT ID: NCT04925570 Completed - Clinical trials for Substance Use Disorders

The Anchor Study: Digitally Delivered Intervention for Reducing Problematic Substance Use

Start date: November 14, 2022
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This study aims to validate W-SUDs as a digitally-delivered substance use disorder program through a fully-powered randomized control trial that will test the comparative efficacy of the mobile-app based substance use disorder program (W-SUDs) to reduce substance use relative to a psychoeducation control condition, which has no cognitive behavioral therapy and the content is not delivered through a conversational user interface.