Opioid Use Clinical Trial
Official title:
Overdose Risk Management and Compensation in the Era of Naloxone
A growing body of research underscores the life- and cost-saving advantages of equipping people who use opioids with naloxone, but very little is known about: 1) barriers to naloxone awareness and access, and 2) the potential psychosocial and behavioral impacts of being "protected" by naloxone while engaging in overdose risk behaviors, of using naloxone on someone else, and of surviving an overdose in which naloxone is used. This research will provide insight into both of these domains to yield a richly contextualized understanding of the processes and mechanisms underlying changes in overdose risk behaviors related to naloxone access and use and will illuminate the disparities that may limit access to naloxone for some or result in compensatory behavior following naloxone exposure for others. Findings from this study will provide an empirical basis to strengthen and refine existing overdose prevention efforts and to design tailored interventions to engage opioid users who have recently survived or reversed an overdose.
Drug overdose (OD) deaths in the United States nearly tripled between 1999 and 2014. During
2015 more than 50,000 people died from overdose nationwide, and almost two thirds (63.1%)
involved opioids.1 In response, the number of opioid OD prevention programs offering naloxone
has ballooned.2 Many states have sought to expand access through provision of the medication
to EMT and police first-responders, over-the-counter availability at pharmacies, and
emergency legislation providing for lay prescribing, largely within the context of opioid OD
prevention programs serving people who use heroin or diverted prescription opioids
(henceforth, people who use illicit opioids; PWUIO). As naloxone has become more commonplace,
however, OD rates have continued to rise, and critical viewpoints about the failure of OD
reversal efforts to deter subsequent high-risk behavior have begun to emerge from police,3
firefighers,4 EMS personnel,5 and news media,6-8 especially following the recent loss of
pop-artist, Prince, to an opioid OD only days after being administered naloxone in an
Illinois hospital.9 This study is responsive to a recent NIDA and FDA mandate for
foundational naloxone research among active users of illicit opioids.10 Specifically, it
assesses two main concerns at the heart of current policymaking related to opioid OD and
naloxone. 1) Disparities in access to naloxone and obstacles to a willingness to be trained
as a naloxone-carrying OD responder: Despite the critically important role PWUIO can play as
OD responders,11-15 questions remain about differential awareness of and access to naloxone
and OD response training among PWUIO. Even in NYC where city and state departments of health
have led concerted and well-funded efforts to saturate the city with naloxone and OD reversal
training, considerable limitations in coverage and training uptake still exist.16 Findings
from our ongoing study of opioid OD risks among military veterans in NYC indicate that many
PWUIO are still naloxone-naïve and, even after learning about its lifesaving utility, still
decline no-cost naloxone and OD response training. 2) The poorly understood impacts of
possessing naloxone, using naloxone on someone else, or having it used on oneself on PWUIO's
subsequent OD rates and risk behaviors: An increasing number of studies seek to track the
uses to which naloxone kits are put, but the broader behavioral impacts of exposure to
naloxone on actual opioid-related risk behaviors have seen almost no empirical investigation
since 2003 when a study of street-recruited PWUIO in San Francisco reported that 35%
indicated that they intended to use more heroin than usual after receiving naloxone.17
Building on our current studies of naloxone use and related attitudes among opioid-using
military veterans and other drug users we propose to recruit 600 adult-age (18+) people who
use illicit opioids (i.e., heroin and/or diverted pharmaceutical opioids) in New York City
using Respondent Driven Sampling. At enrollment, participants will complete a detailed survey
instrument establishing histories of substance use, naloxone exposure, and other potential
barriers to the uptake of naloxone training. Because extant research establishes a clear
public health and ethical imperative to provide PWUIO with naloxone, we will also offer all
participants training to become naloxone-equipped OD responders at enrollment. We will follow
the sample for two years using a mixed-methods approach involving text-message-based exposure
tracking, monthly surveys using a state-of-the-art online data collection portal, and a
qualitative subsample to ensure that naloxone exposures and changes in OD risk behavior are
carefully tracked and contextualized by ethnographic data about the psychosocial and
sociocultural mechanisms underlying participant experiences.
Aim A - Describe factors associated with: 1) lifetime history of access to and use of
naloxone and 2) uptake of no-cost naloxone and OD response training. We will test the
following hypotheses:
HypA1 - Naloxone knowledge and exposure history will vary at enrollment, potentially
revealing disparities based on background factors (e.g., SES, ethnicity, age, neighborhood)
and individual level factors (e.g., mental health diagnoses, opioid use disorder severity,
duration of opioid use) HypA2 - Interest in OD response training and naloxone at baseline
will vary by background and individual-level factors.
Aim B - Describe longitudinal relationships between naloxone exposure (access to and use of
naloxone) and overdose risk behaviors. We will test the following hypothesis:
HypB1 - Naloxone access and use exposures will have measurable impacts on opioid OD-related
risk behaviors over time, potentially varying in degree and direction across subgroups of
PWUIO.
Aim C (Qualitative) - Explore barriers to naloxone uptake and any identified secondary
impacts (e.g., compensatory risk taking, positive change after a naloxone exposure such as
risk reduction or treatment-seeking) in terms of opioid users' own experiences and
perceptions.
By employing a longitudinal and mixed-methods design capable of detecting naloxone exposure
impacts and also illuminating the various mechanisms that may undergird them in participants'
own terms, this project holds serious policy and direct service implications for the
refinement of naloxone training programs and OD risk interventions that target PWUIO. This
research also holds the potential to identify varying naloxone impacts among PWUIO of
different social and behavioral groups—such as people who inject drugs (PWID) vs.
prescription opioid misusers, older vs. younger (or shorter- vs. longer-term) PWUIO, and male
vs. female users—and can inform future efforts to tailor prevention and education to these
distinct subpopulations.
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