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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT05988710
Other study ID # 222204
Secondary ID 1K23DA057387
Status Recruiting
Phase Phase 4
First received
Last updated
Start date October 19, 2023
Est. completion date October 2026

Study information

Verified date October 2023
Source Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Contact Daniel Larach, MD, MSTR, MA
Phone 615-322-6033
Email daniel.larach@vumc.org
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The goal of this study is to compare the abuse potential of low-dose equianalgesic buccal buprenorphine to a commonly used full mu opioid receptor (MOR) agonist in a highly controlled experimental setting. This is a translational study in which healthy participants are phenotyped for psychosocial and Opioid-Use-Disorder-risk-related metrics. In a within-subjects crossover design, 60 participants will receive a standard postoperative oral oxycodone dose (10 mg), placebo, and 3 different doses of buccal buprenorphine across 5 separate sessions. Quantitative Sensory Testing (QST) will be used to evaluate alterations in pain responsiveness relative to placebo across buprenorphine doses and oxycodone, and will compare abuse potential (indexed by the standard FDA drug liking metric) following equianalgesic doses of the two drugs.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Recruiting
Enrollment 72
Est. completion date October 2026
Est. primary completion date October 2026
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender All
Age group 18 Years to 65 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - Intact cognitive status and ability to provide informed consent - Ability to read and write in English sufficiently to understand and complete study questionnaires - Age 18-65 - Opioid-naive status (defined as no use of full mu-opioid receptor (MOR) agonist, partial MOR agonist, or mixed agonist/antagonist medications for the prior 3 months by patient report Exclusion Criteria: - Liver/kidney disease - Chronic pain - Current/prior substance use disorder - Pregnancy (to avoid fetal drug exposure, with pregnancy tests conducted to confirm eligibility) - Seizure disorder - Certain psychiatric conditions (severe depression, bipolar disorder, psychotic disorders) - Recent use of medications that may interfere with study drug metabolism - Recent benzodiazepine or opioid use (confirmed via rapid urine screening prior to each lab session) - The presence of any medical conditions felt by the study physician to render participant unsafe - Prior allergic reaction or intolerance to oxycodone, buprenorphine, or their analogs

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Drug:
Buccal Buprenorphine 300 mcg
buprenorphine for 300mcg buccal administration
Buccal Buprenorphine 600 mcg
buprenorphine for 600mcg buccal administration
Buccal Buprenorphine 900 mcg
buprenorphine for 900mcg buccal administration
Buccal Placebo
Placebo for buccal administration
Oral Placebo
Placebo for oral administration
Oral immediate-release oxycodone 10mg
Immediate-release oxycodone for 10 mg oral administration

Locations

Country Name City State
United States Vanderbilt University Medical Center Nashville Tennessee

Sponsors (2)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Vanderbilt University Medical Center National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Difference in mean maximum effect score (Emax) of the drug liking visual analog scale (VAS) between oxycodone 10 mg and an equianalgesic dose of buprenorphine Difference in mean Emax of the drug liking VAS between oxycodone 10 mg and an equianalgesic dose of buprenorphine conditions. Drug liking VAS is a bipolar scale designed to assess a participant's liking for a given study intervention at the time the question is being asked (that is, at this moment). It is scored as an integer ranging from 0 (strong disliking) to 100 (strong liking). Baseline through 3.5 hours after study drug administration on each medication condition
Primary Quantitative sensory testing (QST) thermal pain tolerance in seconds Mean time in seconds elapsed from onset of the heat pain stimulus to participants withdrawal from the stimulus. Heat pain tolerance is an indicator of pain sensitivity. This will determine the equianalgesic dose of buccal buprenorphine compared to oxycodone 10 mg. Equivalence to oxycodone will be defined as the buprenorphine does that produces a mean thermal pain tolerance increase within 0.5 standard deviation of the oxycodone. response. Baseline through 3.5 hours after study drug administration on each medication condition
Secondary Difference in mean maximum effect score (Emax) of the drug liking visual analog scale between equianalgesic dose of buprenorphine and placebo conditions Difference in mean maximum effect score (Emax) of the drug liking visual analog scale between equianalgesic dose of buprenorphine and placebo conditions. Drug liking VAS is a bipolar scale designed to assess a participant's liking for a given study intervention at the time the question is being asked (that is, at this moment). It is scored as an integer ranging from 0 (strong disliking) to 100 (strong liking). Baseline through 3.5 hours after study drug administration on each medication condition
Secondary Difference in mean maximum effect score (Emax) of the drug liking visual analog scale between oxycodone 10 mg and placebo conditions Difference in mean maximum effect score (Emax) of the drug liking visual analog scale between oxycodone 10 mg and placebo conditions. Drug liking VAS is a bipolar scale designed to assess a participant's liking for a given study intervention at the time the question is being asked (that is, at this moment). It is scored as an integer ranging from 0 (strong disliking) to 100 (strong liking). Baseline through 3.5 hours after study drug administration on each medication condition
Secondary QST heat pain threshold Mean time in seconds elapsed from onset of the thermal stimulus to the point at which heat stimulus is first experienced as painful. Thermal pain threshold is an indicator of pain sensitivity. Baseline through 3.5 hours after study drug administration on each medication condition
Secondary Visual Analog Scale (VAS) pain intensity Difference in mean Emax of the pain intensity VAS between oxycodone 10 mg, equianalgesic dose of buprenorphine and placebo. The VAS pain intensity is a measure of experienced pain intensity on 0 to 100 scale when 0 is no pain and 100 is worst pain imaginable. Baseline through 3.5 hours after study drug administration on each medication condition
Secondary VAS pain unpleasantness Difference in mean Emax of the pain unpleasantness VAS between oxycodone 10 mg, equianalgesic dose of buprenorphine and placebo. The VAS pain unpleasantness is a measure of experienced pain unpleasantness on 0 to 100 scale, when 0 is no unpleasantness and 100 is most unpleasant imaginable. Baseline through 3.5 hours after study drug administration on each medication condition
Secondary McGill Pain Questionnaire - Short Form Mean of maximum McGill Pain Questionnaire - Short Form score between oxycodone 10mg, equianalgesic dose of buprenorphine and placebo. The score ranges from 0-33 where 0 represents no pain and 33 represents most intense pain. Positive change values indicate decreased pain responsiveness. Baseline through 3.5 hours after study drug administration on each medication condition
Secondary VAS alertness/drowsiness Difference in mean Emax of the VAS alertness/drowsiness between oxycodone 10 mg, equianalgesic dose of buprenorphine and placebo. The VAS alertness/drowsiness assesses alertness and drowsiness following drug administration on 0 to 100 sale, when 0 is extreme drowsiness, 50 is neutral, and 100 is extreme alertness. Baseline through 3.5 hours after study drug administration on each medication condition
Secondary VAS any drug effects Difference in mean Emax of the VAS any drug effects between oxycodone 10 mg, equianalgesic dose of buprenorphine and placebo. VAS any drug effects assesses presence of any drug effects felt by participant on 0 to 100 scale, when 0 is no drug effects and 100 is extreme drug effects. Baseline through 3.5 hours after study drug administration on each medication condition
Secondary VAS good effects Difference in mean Emax of the VAS good effects between oxycodone 10 mg, equianalgesic dose of buprenorphine and placebo. VAS good effects assesses presence of drug effects characterized as good felt by participant on scale 0 to 100 when 0 is no good drug effects and 100 is extreme good drug effects. Baseline through 3.5 hours after study drug administration on each medication condition
Secondary VAS feeling high Difference in mean Emax of the VAS feeling high between oxycodone 10 mg, equianalgesic dose of buprenorphine and placebo. VAS feeling high assesses presence of "feeling high" by participant on 0 to 100 scale when o is not feeling high at all and 100 is feeling extremely high. Baseline through 3.5 hours after study drug administration on each medication condition
Secondary VAS bad effects Difference in mean Emax of the VAS bad effects between oxycodone 10 mg, equianalgesic dose of buprenorphine and placebo. VAS bad effects assesses presence of drug effects characterized as bad felt by participant on 0 to 100 scale when 0 is no bad drug effects and 100 is extreme bad drug effects. Baseline through 3.5 hours after study drug administration on each medication condition
Secondary VAS desire to use opioids Difference in mean Emax of the VAS desire to use opioids between oxycodone 10 mg, equianalgesic dose of buprenorphine and placebo. VAS desire to use opioids assesses participant's desire to use opioids on a 0-100 scale when 0 is no desire to use opioids and 100 is extreme desire to use opioids. Baseline through 3.5 hours after study drug administration on each medication condition
Secondary Opioid Adjective Rating Scale Difference in mean Emax of the VAS Opioid Adjective Rating Scale between oxycodone 10 mg, equianalgesic dose of buprenorphine and placebo. VAS Opioid Adjective Rating Scale is a 12 item questionnaire which evaluates common sensory and somatic effects of opioid (e.g., itching, vomiting, sweating, nausea, dry mouth). Each effect is rated on 0 to 4 scale when 0 is not at all and 4 is extremely. Baseline through 3.5 hours after study drug administration on each medication condition
Secondary Temporal summation of pain (TSP) Change in pain intensity between first and most painful TSP stimuli (mean of two TSP trials) compared between oxycodone 10 mg, equianalgesic dose of buprenorphine and placebo conditions. Pain intensity will be measured on a 0-10 Numeric Rating Scale when when 0 is no pain and 100 is worst pain imaginable. Baseline through 3.5 hours after study drug administration on each medication condition
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