View clinical trials related to Opiate Use Disorder.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to test a smart phone based application (the App) that will allow patients to record their attendance at 12-step meetings. The smart phone application is an investigational (experimental) application that works by allowing patients to check in to meetings and tracks their location. This application uses features available in smartphone technology and will be tested on a small scale in order to ascertain interest and benefit in a controlled manner. The initial phase of this process is a test of concept, which poses the question of whether individuals in an office-based addiction treatment program will utilize the application to check in and out of meetings, and answer a brief questionnaire delivered via the app at the end of a meeting. In this phase, investigators will set the standard recommendation as attendance at a minimum of three meetings per week.
In this study, neuroimaging of reward processing, drug cue reactivity and inhibitory control is used before and immediately after 8 weeks of two types of group therapy in individuals with opioid addiction; clinical outcomes will be assessed before, immediately and three months after treatment. Results could point to factors that track and predict recovery with treatment, offering clinicians markers that can be used for enhancing precision medicine with the goal of reducing morbidity and mortality associated with opiate addiction.
The objective of this study is to test a standard psychotherapy for PTSD in Veterans who also suffer from Opiate Use Disorder (OUD). Specifically, this study will test whether Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT)-C is more effective in treating PTSD, compared to a control group (Individual Drug Counseling (IDC); which approximates treatment as usual), among Veterans with PTSD and comorbid OUD who are maintained on buprenorphine. The study has three phases. In Phase I: induction to buprenorphine/naloxone (BUP/NLX) maintenance. Phase II: treatment. During this phase participants will be randomly assigned to CPT-C or IDC for 12 weeks. They will be seen weekly for psychotherapy and also regularly (weekly, then biweekly, then monthly) for buprenorphine management, symptom evaluation, and medication refill. After completing treatment participants will be referred to a buprenorphine clinic for ongoing care. Phase III: follow-up. Approximately 160 male and female Veterans (18-65 years old) with PTSD and comorbid opiate use disorder (OUD) will be enrolled in this study. Recruitment will be through VA clinics, word-of-mouth, referrals from area programs and by advertisement. Veterans who are interested will complete a brief pre-screening and detailed in-person screening. After completing the screening process, all eligible participants will be started on buprenorphine maintenance and once withdrawal symptoms are stabilized, participants will be randomly assigned to 1 of 2 conditions (CPT-C or IDC) for 12 weeks. Veterans who are already on BUP/NLX will be allowed to participate and will start at Phase II of the study, after completing the screening.
The investigators propose to develop a smartphone app (called BetterOFF) that will help patients manage opioid withdrawal during opioid medication taper and detoxification. The BetterOFF smartphone intervention will be a resource patients can access anytime and anywhere. If the BetterOFF intervention were to be effective in helping patients discontinue opioid medication, it could be integrated into the standard of care of office-based clinical practices, as well as substance use programs, thereby having a substantial public health impact.