View clinical trials related to Opioid Dependence.
Filter by:This study will aim to investigate the gut microbiota in Egyptian patients with opioid use disorders and correlate microbiota bacterial abundance with clinical data.
The goal of the proposed study is to generate evidence on the acceptability, feasibility, effectiveness, and cost-effectiveness of introducing long-acting depot buprenorphine (LADB) as an additional option for the treatment of opioid dependence in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC) among people who inject drugs (PWID) with opioid dependence. The study results will be used to inform global and local policies and guidelines to introduce LADB as a treatment option and to advocate for access to a sustainable supply of LADB in LMIC.
Opioid dependence, for example involving addiction to injected or inhaled heroin or similar compounds, is associated with high mortality, typically from opioid overdose, and causes major physical and mental health complications, social problems and crime. Opioid maintenance treatment (OMT) has proven effective in opioid dependence. In 2014, a patient's choice reform in Skåne county, Sweden, was introduced and led to a vast extension of OMT in the region, including a large number of treatment providers and high access to treatment. Still, opioid-related mortality in the region remains high. While patients' access to treatment has been increased, the content and nature of treatment in the present system has been questioned. The present system, which dramatically altered treatment conditions and access for OMT in this region, has never been formally evaluated in any large-scale study. This study aims to assess clinical course of patients receiving OMT before and during the patient choice reform system, and effects on the extent and nature of opioid-related mortality in the region.
A Clinical Trial to Assess Pharmacokinetic Profiles and Safety of IVL3004
This is an open-label pilot trial to assess the safety and feasibility of a novel 8-week psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy intervention to facilitate successful tapering/discontinuation of opioid pain medication in adult patients receiving long-term opioid therapy for chronic pain. Participation will last approximately 8 months and includes one or two psilocybin-assisted therapy sessions. The study will evaluate the incidence and severity of adverse events during and after treatment, the number of participants who drop out of the study for intervention-related reasons, and the self-reported benefits and harms of the intervention.
Background Back pain is among the most common cause for sick leave in the working population and is the main cause of years lived with disability globally. In Norway, about 30% report to live with chronic pain and women are affected more than men. Pharmacological strategies for pain management e.g., opioid medications, is a common treatment method. This is despite clinical guidelines suggesting limiting pharmacological treatment in management of chronic back pain. Long-term use of opioids is linked to opioid-induced hyperalgesia, paradoxically. However, it is suggested that RNA sequencing (seq.) profiling may identify individuals that are at risk of opioid-induced hyperalgesia. To help reduce medication intake brief intervention (BI), a method for discontinuing long-term medication use, has shown to be successful. In this pilot RCT the investigators aim to investigate the feasibility of a full scale RCT and observational study using BI on opioid-using patients with back pain and concurrently study if the response can be predicted by RNA seq. Method Ten outpatients aged 18-67 years with back pain will be recruited from the orthopaedic department at Akershus University Hospital. Inclusion criteria includes daily use of opioids for more than two weeks consecutively, and sufficient language (Norwegian) skills. Exclusion criteria includes severe medical or surgical condition such as cauda equina syndrome, rheumatic disease, psychiatric disease, or recent surgery. The patients will be randomised into two groups (5+5) where one group receives the BI and the other gets treatment as usual. Data collection will be conducted at three-time points; baseline, four weeks follow-up and three months follow-up (end of trial). The primary outcome for this pilot RCT is to test feasibility and estimate effect size for a later full-scale study. Secondary outcomes include subjective and objective findings from the data collection. Results Primary results concerning feasibility are mainly qualitative and will be presented as such. Secondary results including demographic information as well as tentative effect size, patient reported outcomes such as pain intensity, anxiety, depression, quality of life, psychosocial stressors in the workplace and the RNA seq will be presented descriptively. Conclusion The results from this pilot study will assist in constructing the optimal design for a full-scale RCT.
This study will investigate the mechanisms of cognitive-behavioral response to medications used for relapse prevention in opioid use disorder (opioid addiction, OUD), through investigation of the neural circuits underlying key cognition functions. The study will use previously validated cognitive probes, functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI), and novel extended-release injectable preparations of opioid partial agonist buprenorphine and antagonist naltrexone, in OUD patients to explain the individual heterogeneity of OUD treatment response.
This clinical trial aims to assess the tolerability and effectiveness of overlapping buprenorphine initiation and full agonist opioid discontinuation among patients on high-dose long-term full agonist opioid therapy who have opioid physical dependence.
The purpose of this study is determine the safety, efficacy and tolerability of a novel drug APH-1501 as a pharmacotherapy for Opioid Dependence. The investigators will evaluate the safety of escalating doses APH-1501.
Opioid addiction is common worldwide. Thienorphine hydrochloride is a newly partial opioid receptor agonist drugs. It`s affinity with opioid receptors was much higher than opioids, which could effectively prevents opioid dependence by stop opioids competition for opioid receptors and causing opioid dependence. The aim of this research was to determine whether thienorphine hydrochloride would reduce opioid use and better preventing relapse among opioid addicts.