Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Substance use disorders and psychopathy are serious and costly mental health issues. Psychopathy is known to be associated with aberrant moral decision making and there is considerable interest in determining whether substance use disorders lead to impairments in these same cognitive processes. Recent large-scale research initiatives in forensic settings have begun to identify substance abuse and psychopathy-related disruption in the neural mechanisms involved in moral decision-making processes, and associations between these neural networks and future relapse and antisocial behavior. Here the investigators extend prior work (with incarcerated men) to examine these issues among incarcerated women in order to better understand sex differences. This project addresses the overall lack of neurocognitive research in criminal offenders with substance use disorders, thereby focusing on a major public health issue in an underserved and understudied population.


Clinical Trial Description

There continues to be great interest and public health relevance with regard to understanding the neurobiological systems that underlie the comorbidity of substance use disorders and other psychiatric conditions. In a previous award, efforts were focused upon characterizing the neural circuitry underlying moral decision making in incarcerated men with varying levels of two frequently co-occurring conditions: stimulant abuse and psychopathy. Here this work will be extended to incarcerated women, to examine longitudinal outcomes and apply state-of-the-art network analyses for predictive models. Prior studies have demonstrated sex differences in the degree and expression of psychopathic traits, patterns of stimulant abuse, and moral decision-making. However, the neural circuitry that underlies these sex differences is not well understood. Substantial sex differences in regional gray matter volume and density in extant samples have also been identified. Collectively, sex differences in pathophysiology could have significant implications for treatment strategies and differential biomarkers of treatment prediction and outcome in men and women. The investigators will implement the research strategy with a large incarcerated population by deploying a unique mobile MRI scanner to the regional women's prison. Participants will be stratified by level of lifetime stimulant (cocaine, amphetamine) use severity and psychopathic traits (high, medium, low) and will undergo anatomical and functional MRI scanning while completing multi-modal (i.e., linguistic and picture) decision-making tasks. Results will be compared to those obtained in a prior award (incarcerated men, n>300). Functional network and dynamic network connectivity will also be examined in women using a new multiband echo planar imaging (EPI) pulse sequence, and longitudinal outcomes after release to the community will be collected to test behavioral and neuropredictive models of relapse and future antisocial behavior. This work is expected to generate a large, robust dataset that characterizes the overlapping and unique aspects of neural circuitry underlying stimulant use and psychopathy in females and males. The proposed research is in line with recent priorities emphasized by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) for projects aimed at examining male-female differences, and effects specific to females, to improve understanding of the nature and etiology of drug abuse. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05845333
Study type Observational
Source The Mind Research Network
Contact Carla Harenski
Phone 505-272-5028
Email charenski@mrn.org
Status Recruiting
Phase
Start date August 1, 2022
Completion date May 31, 2027

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT04140942 - Improving Employment and Reducing Recidivism Among Prison Offenders Via Virtual Interview Training Tool (MICHR) N/A
Completed NCT02990026 - Specialty Mental Health Probation in North Carolina N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT03937128 - Improving Employment and Reducing Recidivism Among Prison Offenders Via Virtual Interview Training Tool N/A
Recruiting NCT06094972 - The Effectiveness of A-CRA in Compulsory Institutional Care for Youth N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT05729945 - Catholic Health Initiatives (CHI) St. Joseph's Children Home Visiting Longitudinal Study N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT01088542 - The Community Youth Development Study: A Test of Communities That Care N/A
Completed NCT03940716 - Project IntERact Study N/A
Recruiting NCT04850274 - Using Re-inforcement Learning to Automatically Adapt a Remote Therapy Intervention (RTI) for Reducing Adolescent Violence Involvement N/A
Enrolling by invitation NCT04499079 - Alliances to Disseminate Addiction Prevention and Treatment (ADAPT) N/A
Recruiting NCT03883646 - Mindfulness for Alcohol Abusing Offenders N/A
Recruiting NCT05974553 - Dialectical Behavior Therapy for Justice-Involved Veterans N/A
Enrolling by invitation NCT05109689 - A Randomized Controlled Trial of ACT-P Versus T4C for Community Reentry N/A
Recruiting NCT05081934 - Feasibility, Acceptability and Preliminary Treatment Effects of A-CRA for Youth in Compulsory Institutional Care N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT03812484 - An Evaluation of the NJSPB SCF Project for Opioid-Involved High-Risk Parolees N/A
Recruiting NCT05665179 - Removing Barriers: Community Partnering for Innovative Solutions to the Opioid Crisis N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT04982627 - A Brief Negotiation Interview Chatbot to Improve Buprenorphine Engagement Among Justice-Involved Individuals N/A
Completed NCT04899934 - Feasibility of Mobile and Technology Assisted Aftercare Services for Crisis Stabilization Units N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT03826420 - Swift, Certain, and Fair: Reducing Recidivism and Improving Outcomes for Alcohol and Drug Users on State Parole N/A