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Opiate Dependence clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Opiate Dependence.

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NCT ID: NCT00605033 Completed - Opiate Dependence Clinical Trials

A Randomized Acceptability and Safety Study of the Transfer From Subutex to Suboxone in Opioid- Dependent Subjects (Study P04843)(COMPLETED)

Start date: March 2008
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Post-marketing commitment to the European Medicines Agency to conduct a prospective, controlled study of the transfer from Subutex to Suboxone.

NCT ID: NCT00604188 Completed - Opiate Dependence Clinical Trials

A Randomized Acceptability and Safety Study of Suboxone Induction in Heroin Users (P05042)(COMPLETED)

Start date: February 2008
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to assess the acceptability and safety of Suboxone in heroin users as a replacement therapy for opioid dependency by comparing the clinical response of participants who are inducted directly onto Suboxone with that of participants who are inducted first to Subutex and then transferred to Suboxone.

NCT ID: NCT00595764 Completed - Opiate Dependence Clinical Trials

Counseling for Primary Care Office-based Buprenorphine

Start date: August 2005
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The major goal is to determine whether adding cognitive behavioral therapy to physician management will increase the efficacy of buprenorphine/naloxone treatment in an office-based primary care setting.

NCT ID: NCT00580827 Completed - Opiate Dependence Clinical Trials

Clinical Efficacy of Disulfiram in LAAM-Maintained Cocaine Abusers

Start date: September 2003
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This 18-week, randomized, double blind clinical trial provided treatment for 160 cocaine-dependent opioid addicts, aged 18-65 years. Participants were stabilized on LAAM maintenance during the first 4 weeks and cocaine use was assessed; participants were then stratified by level of cocaine use and randomly assigned to receive one of the following: placebo disulfiram (0 mg/day), disulfiram at 62.5 mg/day, disulfiram at 125 mg/day, or disulfiram at 250 mg/day. During induction onto LAAM, participants were administered increasing doses of LAAM plus placebo disulfiram on a thrice-weekly basis until maintenance doses of LAAM are attained. At the beginning of week 5, participants received LAAM plus disulfiram or placebo disulfiram according to their randomized assignments, and were maintained on these agents through week 16. At the end of the study, participants underwent detoxification from LAAM and active/placebo medication over a 4- to 6-week period. All participants received weekly 1-hour psychotherapy (Cognitive Behavioral Treatment) with experienced clinicians specifically trained to deliver the therapy and who received ongoing supervision. The primary outcomes were retention and reduction in opioid and cocaine use, as assessed by self-report and confirmed by thrice-weekly urinalyses. Secondary outcomes included reductions in other illicit drug and alcohol use, as well as improvements in psychosocial functioning.

NCT ID: NCT00577408 Completed - Opiate Dependence Clinical Trials

Behavioral Naltrexone Therapy for Promoting Adherence to Oral Naltrexone vs Extended Release Injectable Depot Naltrexone

Depot-BNT
Start date: September 2007
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

In pilot study now proposed, we plan to randomly assign 60 opioid dependent patients to the new model, Depot-BNT, or to BNT plus oral naltrexone for a 6-month trial. This will provide initial clinical experience with the new Depot-BNT treatment model, while providing a rigorous test of whether Depot-BNT produces superior treatment outcome, compared to our best behavioral platform for oral naltrexone (BNT). The following aims will be addressed: Specific Aim #1: To test whether Depot-BNT increases retention in treatment and improves drug use outcome (urine-confirmed abstinent weeks) compared to our established model of BNT with oral naltrexone (BNT-Oral), and to explore whether Depot-BNT (vs BNT-Oral) improves key secondary outcomes including dysphoria, HIV risk behavior, and social functioning. Specific Aim #2: To explore predictors of outcome on Depot-BNT, and mechanisms of attrition, in order to optimize Depot-BNT prior to further testing.

NCT ID: NCT00566969 Completed - Cocaine Dependence Clinical Trials

Cocaine Withdrawal and Pharmacotherapy Response

Carvedilol
Start date: September 2007
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

A total of 120 male and female opioid dependent cocaine users will participate in this study. This study will be a 8-week double-blind, placebo controlled study examining the dose-dependent effects of carvedilol (up to 50 mg/day) in methadone stabilized patients. The design will have two phases: 1) a four-week "treatment " phase; and 2) a 4 week " taper and detoxification or transfer" phase. Subjects will be cocaine users who are on stable doses of methadone (60 to 140 mg/day). Carvedilol dose will be increased from 12.5mg/day to the target dose of either 25 or 50 mg/day as tolerated. At the end of the treatment-phase, subjects will undergo detoxification from methadone over a 2 to 4-week period based on an individual's needs, and they will concurrently be tapered off carvedilol.

NCT ID: NCT00555425 Completed - Opiate Dependence Clinical Trials

Buprenorphine Maintenance vs. Detoxification in Prescription Opioid Dependence

Start date: July 2008
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The aim of the study is to determine whether buprenorphine/naloxone maintenance versus detoxification using buprenorphine/naloxone, in prescription opioid dependent patients receiving primary care management and drug counseling in an office-based setting, leads to decreased illicit opioid use.

NCT ID: NCT00548275 Completed - HIV Infections Clinical Trials

Reducing Sex-Related HIV Risk Behaviors in Patients Receiving Treatment for Opioid Dependence

Project RED
Start date: July 2006
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The major goal is to determine in patients entering buprenorphine treatment, the prevalence of specific sex-related HIV risk behaviors, their physician's screening of these behaviors and to evaluate the impact of risk reduction counseling.

NCT ID: NCT00539123 Completed - Opiate Dependence Clinical Trials

Drug Counseling and Abstinent-Contingent Take-Home Buprenorphine in Malaysia

Start date: September 2007
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

A randomized clinical trial evaluating whether Behavioral Drug and HIV Risk Reduction Counseling (BDRC), abstinence-contingent take-home buprenorphine (ACB), or the combination of the two improve efficacy and cost-effectiveness of standard buprenorphine treatment for opiate-dependent individuals in Malaysia.

NCT ID: NCT00521157 Completed - Opiate Dependence Clinical Trials

Naltrexone Implants as an Aid in Preventing Relapse Following Inpatient Treatment for Opioid Addiction

Start date: January 2006
Phase: Phase 2/Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this clinical trial is to study the efficacy and safety of naltrexone implants as relapse prevention for patients that are completing treatment for opiate addiction in inpatient (or similarly controlled) settings. Participants volunteer for the study before being released from inpatient treatment, and are randomized to a naltrexone implant group or a waiting-list control for the duration of the first six months following completion of inpatient treatment. Both groups are free to receive treatment as usual (TAU) from the Norwegian healthcare system. After six months, both groups will be offered to have naltrexone implanted for the remaining six months of the study. The hypotheses are that quality of life, depression, opioid use, will be significantly better in the naltrexone group compared to the non at 6-month follow-up. For the last six months of the trial, the investigators hypothesise that choice of naltrexone implant will mainly strengthen positive tendencies or reverse negative trends on the aforementioned variables. The investigators also hypothesize that the implants can prevent death from opioid overdose up to 6 months after commenced treatment.