Clinical Trials Logo

Opioid Use Disorders clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Opioid Use Disorders.

Filter by:
  • None
  • Page 1

NCT ID: NCT03190954 Recruiting - Normal Physiology Clinical Trials

Brain Dopaminergic Signaling in Opioid Use Disorders

Start date: August 17, 2017
Phase: Early Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

Background: The chemical messenger dopamine carries signals between brain cells. It may affect addiction. Heavy use of pain medicines called opioids may decrease the amount of dopamine available to the brain. Researchers want to study if decreased dopamine decreases self-control and increases impulsiveness. Objective: To learn more about how opiate use disorder affects dopamine in the brain. Eligibility: Adults 18-80 years old who are moderate or severe opiate users Healthy volunteers the same age Design: Participants will first be screened under another protocol. They will: - Have a physical exam - Answer questions about their medical, psychiatric, and alcohol and drug use history - Take an MRI screening questionnaire - Give blood and urine samples - Have their breath tested for alcohol Participants will have up to 3 study visits. They will have 2-3 positron emission tomography (PET) scans. A radioactive chemical will be injected for the scans. Participants will lie on a bed that slides in and out of the donut-shaped scanner. A cap or plastic mask may be placed on the head. Vital signs will be taken before and after the PET scans. Participants will get capsules of placebo or the study drug. They will rate how they feel before, during and after. Participants will have their breath and urine tested each day. Participants will have magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans. They will lie on a table that slides into a cylinder in a strong magnetic field. They may do tasks on a computer screen while inside the scanner. Participants will have tests of memory, attention, and thinking. Participants will wear an activity monitor for one week....

NCT ID: NCT02814305 Completed - Clinical trials for Tooth Extraction Status Nos

Opioid Analgesic Use and Disposal Following Outpatient Dental Surgery

Start date: March 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Background: Overdose deaths from prescription opioid analgesics quadrupled from 4,000 cases to nearly 17,000 cases annually during 1999-2011. Most people who misuse or abuse prescription opioids obtain these pills from friends or family members who have surplus medication left over from prior prescriptions. There is little published data on surplus opioid analgesics remaining after patients recover from painful procedures. Even less is known about patients' willingness to dispose of these leftover pills. Aims: 1) Measure the impact of a risk education intervention and a financial incentive intervention on patients' willingness to dispose of surplus opioids left over after outpatient dental surgery. 2) Measure the number and proportion of opioid pills left unused after outpatient dental surgery. Methods: The study will be a pilot randomized controlled trial. Adult patients at the Penn Dental Care Center will be enrolled prior to elective outpatient dental surgery. Patients will be randomized to a control group, an educational intervention, or a financial incentive intervention. The primary outcome of the trial is the proportion of patients in each arm that express willingness to return their unused opioids. Secondary outcomes include patient use of prescribed opioids and their number of unused pills. These outcomes will be measured using novel text-message based data collection software that patients will interact with using a web-enabled cellular telephone or tablet.

NCT ID: NCT02651584 Completed - Clinical trials for Opioid Use Disorders

Clinical Trial of CAM2038, Long-acting Subcutaneous Buprenorphine Injections for Treatment of Patients With Opioid Dependence

Start date: December 2015
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Phase III, randomized, double-blind, double-dummy, active-controlled, parallel group multi-center trial, designed to evaluate the non-inferiority of CAM2038 compared to an existing standard of care (SL BPN/NX) in initiation and maintenance treatment with BPN.

NCT ID: NCT02647073 Withdrawn - Clinical trials for Opioid Use Disorders

The Mobile Monitoring of Vital Signs in Opioid Users

MOVE
Start date: August 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Opioid dependence and its associated harms are becoming increasingly prevalent in North America, with overdose now being the second leading cause of accidental death in the US. This pilot study will investigate the feasibility of a novel mobile device to monitor vital signs in both opioid-injecting individuals and hospital inpatients who are on high-dose oral opioids. A secondary goal is to explore associations between consumption and changes in vital signs post-injection with the long-term goal of developing a mobile system that will alert clinicians when patients are at risk of overdose so that appropriate interventions can be delivered in time.

NCT ID: NCT02602535 Completed - Chronic Pain Clinical Trials

Mindfulness-Oriented Recovery Enhancement For Chronic Pain and Prescription Opioid Misuse in Primary Care

Start date: January 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The central aim of this study is to test the efficacy of Mindfulness-Oriented Recovery Enhancement (MORE), an intervention designed to disrupt the risk chain leading from chronic pain to prescription opioid misuse and addiction. The investigators plan to conduct a full scale clinical trial to determine whether MORE (relative to a support group control condition) can reduce symptoms of chronic pain and opioid misuse among patients who are receiving pain management in primary care via long-term opioid analgesic therapy.

NCT ID: NCT02571400 Completed - Surgery Clinical Trials

Prevalence and Predictors of Prolonged Post-surgical Opioid Use: a Prospective Observational Cohort Study

Start date: October 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Post-surgical opioid prescribing intended for the short-term management of acute pain may lead to long-term opioid use, and its associated harms. This study was undertaken to determine the prevalence of prolonged post-surgical opioid use, and patient-related factors associated with prolonged post-surgical opioid use.

NCT ID: NCT02464410 Completed - Pain Clinical Trials

Primary Care Intervention to Reduce Prescription Opioid Overdoses

POST
Start date: August 4, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The high rate of adverse events, including overdose, resulting from opioid pain medication use threatens the quality and safety of pain care in the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) and elsewhere and is a critical public health problem in the United States. Pain is a highly common condition among VHA patients, and opioid therapy constitutes a primary mode of pain treatment. This study seeks to address this issue by conducting a randomized controlled trial of a brief conversation to improve opioid safety among Veteran patients receiving long-term opioid therapy. Veterans receiving opioid therapy for pain in primary care will be recruited and randomized to receive either a single session motivational intervention focused on safe opioid use or an equal attention control condition. The primary hypothesis is that the motivational intervention will improve opioid safety, decrease risk behaviors, aberrant opioid use, and total quantities of opioids prescribed relative to the control condition. Study findings will inform efforts to ensure the safety and well-being of Veteran patients with pain.

NCT ID: NCT02110264 Completed - Clinical trials for Opioid Use Disorders

Injectable Pharmacotherapy for Opioid Use Disorders (IPOD)

IPOD
Start date: June 2015
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The aim of this trial is to assess the clinical utility, effectiveness, and cost implications of treatment for incarcerated offenders with opioid use disorders who are randomly assigned to one of three treatment conditions to include a depot formulation of naltrexone (XR-NTX, as Vivitrol®) only (XR-NTX), Vivitrol provided with sessions with a patient navigator (PN) XR-NTX+PN, and a drug education procedure (ETAU) before being released to the community. This trial will investigate whether effective medication therapy used in non-incarcerated populations will also be effective in incarcerated individuals. Empirical evidence demonstrates that starting treatment before release greatly increases the probability of successful outcome including reduced alcohol and drug use, increased employment rates, and reduced recidivism rates.