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Cocaine Dependence clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Cocaine Dependence.

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NCT ID: NCT00780702 Completed - Clinical trials for Opioid-Related Disorders

Aripiprazole for Prevention of Relapse to Cocaine Use in Methadone-Maintenance Patients

Start date: May 8, 2008
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

Background: - The effectiveness of methadone maintenance for treatment of heroin addiction has been well established. However, patients maintained on methadone may relapse to cocaine use, even when they are enrolled in a comprehensive treatment program. Relapse has been attributed to several factors, including drug-associated environmental stimuli. - Aripiprazole is a drug used to treat schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, but it may have other uses. Research has shown that aripiprazole can reduce cocaine-seeking behavior in rats, and it has been investigated for use in treating amphetamine dependence. More research is needed to determine whether aripiprazole can prevent relapse to cocaine use in patients being treated with methadone. Objectives: - To determine whether aripiprazole prevents relapse to cocaine use more effectively than placebo in cocaine-abstinent patients maintained on methadone. Eligibility: - Individuals between 18 and 60 years of age who are current cocaine users seeking methadone treatment. Design: - The study will last up to 41 weeks, with four phases of treatment and a follow-up evaluation. Three times a week, participants will be asked to report illicit drug use and provide urine and breath samples. Throughout the study, participants will receive individual counseling in weekly 40 60 minute sessions. Other samples and tests will be scheduled as required by the study researchers. - Patients will be stabilized on daily methadone over the first 14 days of the study. - Weeks 1 14: Participants will receive vouchers for regular cocaine-free urine samples. Those who successfully complete this phase will continue to the next part of the study. - Weeks 13 27: Participants will receive either aripiprazole or placebo along with their methadone. During this part of the study, participants will keep electronic diaries to record cocaine use or craving and to record data on mood and activity. - Weeks 28 33: Participants will stop taking the aripiprazole or placebo, but will continue the methadone treatment. Participants will continue to use the electronic diaries. - Weeks 34 41: Participants will have the choice of transferring to a community clinic or gradually reducing doses of methadone to end the study. - Participants will return for a follow-up visit and urine sample 6 months after the end of the study.

NCT ID: NCT00777062 Completed - Alcohol Dependence Clinical Trials

VIVITROL as a Treatment for Cocaine and Alcohol Dependence

Start date: July 2009
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

To evaluate the efficacy of VIVITROL (naltrexone for extended-release injectable suspension) for the treatment of co-occurring cocaine and alcohol dependence

NCT ID: NCT00756925 Completed - Cocaine Dependence Clinical Trials

Gender and Neural Substrates of Stress and Craving

Start date: February 2009
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Cocaine dependence is an insidious disease underscored by a powerful proclivity to relapse despite an individual's ability to recognize the deleterious consequences of continued drug use. To date, there are only a limited number of treatments, and no FDA approved medications for the treatment of cocaine dependence. Attempts to find reliable and successful treatments for cocaine dependence may be marred by gender differences in brain chemistry, structure, and function that are manifested as drug craving and relapse. For example, cues, drug exposure, and stress promote relapse, yet females appear be more susceptible to stress induced relapse, while males may be more susceptible to cue induced relapse. Therefore identifying the neural substrates involved in processing the valence of internal and external stimuli may provide further insight into cocaine dependence and provide more effective therapeutic strategies aimed at preventing relapse. Corticotropin releasing hormone (CRH) is a pharmacological activator of the hypothalamic pituitary adrenal (HPA) axis, and has been implicated in stress induced drug relapse. Corticotropin releasing hormone receptors are located at extrahypothalamic brain nuclei that have been implicated in determining the significance of both internal (somatic) and external (environmental) stimuli. The primary directive of this pilot project is to utilize functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to identify possible brain nuclei associated with with stress induced drug craving in cocaine dependent females.

NCT ID: NCT00744601 Completed - Cocaine Dependence Clinical Trials

Impulsivity, Neural Deficits and Cocaine Addiction

Start date: April 2007
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The purpose of this study is to assess neurocognitive and associated neural regions/circuitry disruptions relevant to impulsive relapse in cocaine-addicted subjects, and the relationship of the cognitive and neural mechanisms of impulsivity/decision-making to relapse style.

NCT ID: NCT00737256 Recruiting - Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

A Double-Blind, Controlled Study of Aripiprazole in Co-Morbid Schizophrenia and Cocaine Dependence

Start date: August 2008
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to gather systematic clinical data on whether aripiprazole, a partial dopamine agonist, beneficially affects schizophrenia plus cocaine dependence subjects. Since aripiprazole has established effects against schizophrenia, the study focuses on whether aripiprazole concurrently reduces co-morbid cocaine dependence in schizophrenia plus cocaine dependence sufferers compared to a standard typical antipsychotic treatment (perphenazine). The working hypothesis states that subjects in the aripiprazole treatment arm of the study will give fewer cocaine positive urine specimens as compared to the perphenazine control arm.

NCT ID: NCT00733993 Completed - Cocaine Dependence Clinical Trials

Caffeine and Cocaine

Start date: April 2008
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This study is being done to find out if medicines that affect a neurotransmitter (chemical messenger) in the brain called adenosine improve behavioral problems that are related to drug abuse. Another purpose of the study is to find out how genes related to adenosine change how people respond to these medicines. More information about how these medicines change behaviors may be helpful to come up with new treatments for drug abuse.

NCT ID: NCT00732901 Completed - Cocaine Dependence Clinical Trials

Clinical Neurobiology of Serotonin and Addiction

Start date: June 2008
Phase: Phase 2/Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to examine the relationship between 5-HT2R function, impulsivity and cue reactivity in cocaine dependent subjects and healthy controls and examine specific effects of escitalopram and mirtazapine on impulsivity and cue reactivity in human cocaine users.

NCT ID: NCT00713583 Completed - Cocaine Dependence Clinical Trials

Carbidopa/Levodopa Combined With Behavioral Therapy for the Treatment of Cocaine Dependence

Start date: January 2008
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Cocaine dependence is a major public health problem and the development of a treatment for this disorder is a priority. To date, treatment interventions based on positive incentive principles have shown the strongest effects for improving substance use outcomes. One such example is contingency management (CM) interventions in which nondrug rewards are used to compete with cocaine. Recent evidence suggests that certain medications improve response to CM interventions, particularly agents that target dopamine reward systems in the brain. A promising dopamine-enhancing medication is levodopa. The study team has observed the strongest effects of levodopa when the medication is administered in the context of CM therapy, perhaps through mechanisms that enhance reward saliency. The proposed study is designed to further evaluate this promising treatment approach. Cocaine dependent outpatients will participate in a randomized, 2-group (levodopa vs. placebo), double-blind clinical trial. CM will be behavioral therapy platform for both treatment groups. The study will test the primary hypothesis that CM+levodopa will be more effective than CM+placebo in reducing cocaine use. This study is expected to validate the usefulness of a new behavioral-pharmacological treatment approach for cocaine dependence.

NCT ID: NCT00701532 Completed - Cocaine Dependence Clinical Trials

Brain Imaging Study of the Effects of Modafinil in Cocaine Addiction

CAIMAN
Start date: April 2009
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

-Context: Study objectives Primary: impact of modafinil versus placebo on DAT density modifications in the striatal and extra-striatal regions in cocaine dependent subjects hospitalised from D3 to D21. Primary Hypothesis: More rapid normalisation of DAT concentrations measured by PET using modafinil versus placebo from D3 to D21 during cocaine detoxification.

NCT ID: NCT00697138 Completed - Cocaine Dependence Clinical Trials

Agonist Replacement Therapy for Cocaine Dependence

Start date: June 2006
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

Cocaine dependence is a significant public health concern. The proposed research will provide important clinical information regarding the efficacy of agonists replacement therapies for managing cocaine dependence.