View clinical trials related to Alcohol Use Disorder.
Filter by:Remote breath alcohol monitors have been increasingly adopted for use in clinical, research and forensic settings to monitor alcohol use because they offer several key advantages over other available monitoring methods. However, it remains unknown if remote breathalyzers reliably detect alcohol use because there is up to a 10-hour window of time when breath samples are not obtained (to allow for sleeping). Additionally, the investigators will examine whether a supplemental measurement of a blood alcohol use biomarker (phosphatidylethanol) can confirm abstinence and/or detect individuals engaging in late-evening drinking to avoid the negative consequences associated with detected alcohol use.
Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) is a major public health problem, characterized by a high rate of relapse. Chronic and excessive alcohol consumption notably induces frontal brain alterations and cognitive impairments such as executive dysfunction and an attentional bias for alcohol, participating to the risk of relapse. In effect, AUD patients preferentially process alcohol-related cues, which could reflect a reorganization of the patients' semantic network. The investigators hypothesize that in AUD patients, semantic associations in memory are reorganized with a higher centrality of alcohol-related elements. To the investigators knowledge, no studies have explored semantic associations and/or semantic networks in AUD. A study, conducted in patients with neurological damage, showed that frontal lesions are associated with excessive strength in semantic associations, and difficulties to generate remote associations. This excessive strength in semantic associations could reduce the ability to inhibit automatisms and to adapt to new context. Objective: The objective of this study is to explore whether and how AUD patients have a different organization of semantic associations than healthy controls, and whether this reorganization influences the alcohol consumption over the months following the withdrawal. The investigators will also explore how it relates to neuropsychological assessment of flexibility, executive functions, and impulsivity. To these purposes, the investigators will use two original verbal tasks (Free Generation of Associates Task, FGAT and Associative Judgment Task, AJT) assessing word associations and allowing the estimation of semantic networks using graph theory, in combination with neuropsychological testing, in AUD patients and in healthy controls. Methods: This study will include a group of 30 AUD patients and a group of 30 healthy controls. Both groups will be assessed twice, at baseline (T1; early in abstinence for AUD patients) and after a three-month period (T3). For the two groups, T1 and T3 assessments will include the two semantic association tasks (FGAT and AJT). For AUD patients, assessments will also involve neuropsychological testing of impulsivity, flexibility, and attentional bias. Besides, in AUD patients, data about alcohol consumptions will be collected six weeks (T2) and three months (T3) following the baseline assessment to classify patients as relapsers or abstainers.
Rationale: Alcohol-Avoidance Training (AAT) has been used successfully to strengthen avoidance-tendencies in patients with alcohol use disorder (AUD). AAT is already recommended in German clinical treatment guidelines as an evidence-based treatment for AUD and may be incorporated in the next revision of the Dutch clinical guidelines on AUD. Studies in other fields (semantic learning) suggest that spaced learning may be superior to massed learning, but this has not been studied with regard to AAT. Objectives: To compare the effectiveness of spaced versus massed AAT sessions. Study design: a two armed, randomised controlled trail. All participants will receive AAT in addition to routine clinical care in an inpatient setting (Treatment As Usual; TAU). AAT sessions in the experimental group (AAT-S) will be spaced out over four weeks following detoxification. Sessions in the control group (AAT-M) are massed within one week following detoxification. Assessments of alcohol consumption and craving take place before the start of AAT (baseline: T0, timeframe: last 30 days before admission (alcohol use) or past week (craving)) at three (T1) and six months follow-up (T2). Study population: 200 patients with a primary DSM-5 diagnosis of AUD who receive TAU at three addiction care sites (clinical facilities 'Zevenaar', 'Tiel' and 'Wolfheze') of IrisZorg. Patients have finished alcohol detoxification, age ≥ 18, have good Dutch proficiency and have given written informed consent. During the follow-up assessments they are likely to have progressed to regular outpatient addiction treatment. Intervention: During their four week (minimum) admission all participants receive TAU, which includes Community Reinforcement Approach (CRA) (Meyers & Smith, 1995) grouptraining, AAT, sociotherapy and pharmacotherapy. AAT is a Cognitive Bias Modification paradigm that is used to retrain alcohol approach biases. In AAT participants must react to pictures of alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages with a joystick to the tilt of the pictures which are presented on a computer screen. In current routine clinical care AAT sessions are massed in the first week after detoxification (control condition: AAT-M). In the experimental condition AAT trails will be spaced out over four weekly sessions instead of one week (AAT-S). Main study parameters/endpoints: Changes from baseline to three and six month follow-up in: 1. Mean daily units of alcohol consumed (past 30 days); at baseline this refers to the 30 days directly pre-admission). 2. Mean ratings of mean alcohol craving (past seven days). Nature and extent of the burden and risks associated with participation, benefit and group relatedness: Participants in both conditions will receive the same amount of AAT sessions and trials. Sessions in the AAT-S condition will be spread out over four weeks. Participants in this condition will therefore be exposed to AAT alcohol pictures over a longer period. Given our current experience of AAT as part of TAU, we expect little risk of participants experiencing more sensations of craving. Alcohol (use) is discussed daily during admission as part of TAU. As an extra burden, participants will be asked to complete a questionnaire before the first AAT session. Participants will be approached for follow-up assessment three and six months following the first month of inpatient treatment. Participants receive an incentive (a voucher worth €15,-) after completing all FU assessments, as a compensation for the extra burden.
Alcohol use disorder (AUD) inflicts enormous physical, emotional, and financial burdens on the individual and society at large. Insomnia is highly prevalent among individuals with AUD, and disrupted sleep contributes substantially to alcohol-related problems. While research suggests that treating insomnia may effectively reduce AUD, the degree to which treating insomnia in heavy drinkers reduces alcohol consumption and prevents the onset of severe AUD is not known. This study will be the first to evaluate an Internet-based version of cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) in community-dwelling, heavy drinking adults with insomnia. Sleep Healthy Using the Internet (SHUTi), the most widely-used and well-validated version of Internet-based CBT-I will be used. The primary aim is to reduce alcohol consumption and insomnia severity in this population.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of an adaptive web intervention (Partners Connect) on military spouse drinking behaviors (CPs) and service member help-seeking (SMs). The investigators want to identify for whom this intervention is most efficacious and on what drinking behaviors and mechanisms. The investigators hypothesize that the intervention will reduce concerned partner drinking and increase service member help-seeking, compared to website resources, and that phone-based CRAFT will increase help-seeking behaviors, compared to those who are guided via a CRAFT workbook.
This is a double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel group study designed to assess the efficacy of full spectrum CBD and broad spectrum CBD, compared to a placebo control (PC), to reduce drinking in participants with alcohol use disorder. If eligible for the study, subjects will be randomized to receive one of the conditions for 12 weeks.
The goal of this single-arm clinical trial is to better understand the ways in which individuals seeking treatment recover from Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD). The main aims are to: - To establish operational definitions of types of change in relation to National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism's (NIAAA) new definition of recovery, and to distinguish between treatment response, remission versus recovery, and relapse versus recurrence. - To describe patterns of recovery, including the frequency of within-person transitions between types of change in clinical course to better understand the dynamic nature of recovery. - To examine the predictive relationships between theoretically important cognitive, behavioral, and affective process variables and changes during recovery, with a focus on how people initiate versus maintain change. Participants will: - Receive 12 weeks of psychotherapy for Alcohol Use Disorder - Complete brief assessments after each treatment session. - Complete brief assessments bi-weekly via phone for 1-year following treatment. - Complete in-person interviews at 3 or 6-month intervals post-treatment.
The purpose of this research study is to test new technology-driven programs to see if they might help people manage their health and health behaviors related to alcohol use and well-being. The programs focus on getting to know what's important to participants, reviewing or setting goals, and using different skills and behaviors to manage health. The study will help researchers learn about ways to deliver health information in a way that is useful and interesting.
Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is characterized by problematic alcohol use accompanied by clinically significant distress. This disorder is associated with high relapse rates, with one in five patients remaining abstinent 12 months post-treatment. Traditional face-to-face relapse prevention treatment (RPT) is a form of cognitive behavioural therapy that examines one's situational triggers, maladaptive thought processes, self-efficacy, and motivation, however access to this treatment is frequently limited due to its high cost, long waitlists, and inaccessibility. Thus, an online adaptation of RPT (e-RPT) could address these limitations by providing a more cost-effective and accessible delivery method for mental health care in this population. This study aims to establish the first academic e-RPT program to address AUD in the general population. We will recruit adult participants (n = 60) with a confirmed diagnosis of AUD. Then, these participants will be randomly assigned to receive ten sessions of e-RPT or face-to-face RPT. e-RPT will consist of 10 predesigned modules and homework with asynchronous personalized feedback from a therapist. Face-to-face RPT will consist of 10, one-hour long face-to-face sessions with a therapist. The predesigned modules and the face-to-face sessions will present the same content and structure. Self-efficacy, resilience, depressive symptomatology, and alcohol consumption will be measured through various questionnaires at baseline, week 5, and week 10. Outcome data will be assessed using linear and binomial regression (continuous and categorical outcomes respectively). Qualitative data will be analyzed using thematic analysis methods.
The purpose of this study is to learn whether a mobile health application (mHealth App) for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) with brief support can help individuals who are in treatment for alcohol problems.