Clinical Trials Logo

Opioid-Related Disorders clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Opioid-Related Disorders.

Filter by:

NCT ID: NCT04976855 Completed - Healthy Volunteer Clinical Trials

Study to Assess Repeated Doses of INDV-2000 in Healthy Volunteers and in Treatment Seeking Individuals With Opioid Use Disorder

Start date: August 17, 2022
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The primary objectives for the study are: - Part I and Part II: Assess safety and tolerability of repeated doses of INDV-2000 in healthy volunteers. - Part III: Assess the safety and tolerability of repeated doses of INDV-2000 administered alone and with SUBOXONE sublingual (SL) film in an opioid use disorder (OUD) treatment seeking population.

NCT ID: NCT04961294 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Opioid-Related Disorders

EA for Protracted Withdrawal of OUD

Start date: July 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Opioid use disorder (OUD) the most harmful of all the illicit drugs is a serious substance-related disorder resulting from abuse or misuse of opioids. Huge number of patients are addictive to opioid and evidences show that patients with OUD have high rates of infectious diseases.The "World Drug Report 2020" has declared that 58 million people used opioids in 2018 and some 35.6 million people suffered from drug use disorders globally. More than 11 million people inject drugs, while 1.4 million PWID are living with HIV, 5.5 million with hepatitis C and 1.2 million are living with both hepatitis C and HIV. The long-term physical and mental symptoms of some opioid drug users after detoxification treatment are called protracted opioid withdrawal syndrome (POAS). POAS is one of the important causes of relapse. Methadone maintenance treatment is the most widespread and extensively researched treatment for heroin addiction and has been shown to reduce the frequency of opioid use, the mortality, and the transmission of human immunodeficiency virus and viral hepatitis. But higher daily methadone dose and increasing duration of treatment conduce the addiction in methadone. Other medication therapy like naltrexone treatment is also associated with high rates of noncompliance and opioid relapse. Meanwhile, relapse to heroin use following cessation of agonist maintenance treatment is common. The problems associated with use of opioid agonists have made it necessary to develop non-opioid therapies to ameliorate the symptoms of acute and protracted opioid withdrawal. Acupuncture based on traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) theory is becoming a popular complementary and alternative treatment worldwide. Study showed that acupuncture reduced the depression symptoms and cravings of patients under methadone maintenance treatment. Another study by Le et al. (2016) showed that electric acupuncture has been associated with a reduction in depressive symptoms through the adjustment of HPA axis function and increasing the hippocampus activity. And also some research show the efficiency of acupuncture in treating mice with OUD. Investigators conduct a pragmatic randomized controlled trials(pRCT) to observe the effect of acupuncture in a larger sample. It combines the advantages of randomization and real-world data, and the results can provide the best real-world evidence for the assessment of intervention effects or comparative effects.

NCT ID: NCT04958798 Completed - Opioid-use Disorder Clinical Trials

Culturally Centering Medications for Opioid Use Disorder With American Indian and Alaska Native Communities

CTN-0096
Start date: June 21, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a formative research study to test a culturally-centered, program-level implementation intervention to increase the use of medications for opioid use disorder in four healthcare and addiction specialty treatment sites serving American Indian and Alaska Native communities.

NCT ID: NCT04948307 Completed - Opioid-use Disorder Clinical Trials

OXD01 in Combination With Sublingual Buprenorphine/Naloxone for Treatment of Opioid Use Disorder

Start date: June 30, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is an open-label, randomized, parallel-group multicenter study designed to evaluate the efficacy of the digital therapeutic OXD01 (MODIA) combined with sublingual buprenorphine/naloxone standard of care (SL BUP/NAL SOC) background therapy compared to SL BUP/NAL alone to change opioid use patterns in subjects with OUD. Approximately 400 subjects will be randomized. The study will include a screening visit and a randomization visit, followed by 24 weeks of study treatment. Subjects will be scheduled for evaluation visits, which will include a UDS and a self report of drug use, weekly during the first four weeks of treatment, then every other week from weeks 5 through 12, then monthly through week 25. Subjects will also return to the site for only a urine drug screen (UDS) and a self-report of drug use each week between the evaluation visits. The primary objective of the study is to determine whether the combination of sublingual (SL) buprenorphine/naloxone (BUP/NAL) standard of care (SOC) background therapy and the digital therapeutic OXD01 is superior to SL BUP/NAL alone to reduce opioid use.

NCT ID: NCT04947475 Active, not recruiting - Depression Clinical Trials

Project MATLINK: Development and Evaluation of a Screening, Brief Intervention, & Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) Program for Opioid Dependent Prisoners and Probationers Transitioning to the Community

MATLINK
Start date: January 1, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy a Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) program for linking opioid dependent individuals currently incarcerated or in probation in Moldova, Kyrgyzstan, and Ukraine to opioid substitution therapy in the community after release or during their probation period.

NCT ID: NCT04946656 Suspended - Opioid Use Disorder Clinical Trials

A Study of SPG Block for Opioid Withdrawal

Start date: February 3, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Medication is the most efficacious treatment of an opioid use disorder, including methadone, buprenorphine, and naltrexone. However, many patients experience withdrawal symptoms, which prevents them from being successfully inducted onto medication for opioid use disorder. This study is a pilot study investigating whether blocking the SPG helps reduce withdrawal symptoms in OUD. This study does not involve treatment or induction onto medications. It is a proof of principal study only. We will recruit non-treatment seeking subjects with OUD who are admitted to the research unit for all procedures.

NCT ID: NCT04941950 Active, not recruiting - Opioid Misuse Clinical Trials

Randomized Controlled Trial: A Digital Intervention to Prevent the Initiation of Opioid Misuse in Adolescents in School-based Health Centers

Start date: October 19, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The primary hypothesis of this study is that at 3 months, there will be a higher proportion of intervention participants vs. control participants who report greater risk of harm from misuse of prescription opioids AND heroin/fentanyl.

NCT ID: NCT04939727 Completed - Opioid Use Clinical Trials

Suicide Prediction and Prevention for People at Risk for Opioid Use Disorder: Supplement to COMPUTE 2.0

Start date: August 3, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study integrates the Mental Health Research Network (MHRN) suicide risk models into Opioid Wizard, an electronic health record (EHR) clinical decision support (CDS) to identify and treat patients at high risk of opioid use disorder (OUD)/overdose or diagnosed with OUD, to alert primary care clinicians (PCCs) to patients at elevated risk for suicide and guide them through structured suicide risk assessment. In both intervention and control clinics, suicide risk scores will be calculated for all Opioid Wizard-eligible patients and relevant EHR data to inform analyses will be archived. In intervention clinics, Opioid Wizard will alert PCCs to Opioid Wizard-eligible patients who are at increased risk of suicide and coach them through use of the Columbia Suicide Severity Risk Scale (CSSRS), a structured tool in the EHR that will help PCCs assess immediate suicide risk. Based on the resulting CSSRS score, Opioid Wizard will provide EHR links for risk-based referrals and follow-up recommendations, including care as usual, routine or emergent referral to behavioral health, or transportation to the emergency department (ED) for further assessment. Primary outcome measures include completion of CSSRS assessments for at-risk patients and patient engagement in outpatient mental health care.

NCT ID: NCT04933084 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Opioid-Related Disorders

Pre-operative Education Modalities to Decrease Opioid Use

Start date: September 16, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a triple-armed, randomized, controlled, non-blinded trial to study the effect of preoperative patient education in conjunction with a limited opioid peri-operative analgesia program on post-operative opioid use following radical prostatectomy. Patients will be randomized into three education arms: usual care (variable provider-dependent education), text handout, or text handout and pre-recorded video. The impact of patient education on outcomes of in-hospital, post-discharge, and persistent opioid use will be studied.

NCT ID: NCT04927143 Recruiting - Opioid Use Clinical Trials

Encouraging Abstinence Behavior in a Drug Epidemic

Start date: September 15, 2021
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Combatting the rise of the opioid epidemic is a central challenge of U.S. health care policy. A promising approach for improving welfare and decreasing medical costs of people with substance abuse disorders is offering incentive payments for healthy behaviors. This approach, broadly known as "contingency management" in the medical literature, has repeatedly shown to be effective in treating substance abuse. However, the use of incentives by treatment facilities remains extremely low. Furthermore, it is not well understood how to design optimal incentives to treat opioid abuse. This project will conduct a randomized evaluation of two types of dynamically adjusting incentive schedules for people with opioid use disorders or cocaine use disorders: "escalating" schedules where incentive amounts increase with success to increase incentive power, and "de-escalating" schedules where incentive amounts decrease with success to improve incentive targeting. Both schemes are implemented with a novel "turnkey" mobile application, making them uniquely low-cost, low-hassle, and scalable. Effects will be measured on abstinence outcomes, including longest duration of abstinence and the percentage of negative drug tests. In combination with survey data, variation from the experiment will shed light on the barriers to abstinence more broadly and inform the understanding of optimal incentive design.