Northeast Node Research Studies
CTN-0116: Implementing a Pharmacist-Integrated Collaborative Model of Medication Treatment for Opioid Use Disorder (PharmICO)
Funding Source
NIDA CTN
Project Period
12/01/2020 – 11/30/2023 (extended to 2/28/2025 due to delays from the COVID pandemic)
Principal Investigators
Lisa A. Marsch, PhD (PI, Northeast Node, Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth College); Felicity Homsted, PharmD, MBA (Co-Lead Investigator, Northeast Node, Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth College); David Fiellin, MD, (Co-Lead Investigator, New England Consortium)
Advisors/Consultants/Co-Investigators/Project Team
Trip Gardner, MD, Penobscot Community Health Center (PCHC); Paul Joudrey, MD, MPH, Appalachia Node of the CTN; Lisa Saldana, PhD, Chestnut Health System; Sarah Moore, PhD, Northeast Node/Center for Technology and Behavioral Health; Jerry Cochran, PhD, Greater Intermountain Node of the CTN; Noah Nesin, MD, PCHC; Kristopher Ravin, PharmD, PCHC; Vijay Amarendran, MD, PCHC; Frank McGrady, PharmD, BCPS, PCHC; Melissa Carr, RPh, PCHC; Alison Carter, PCHC; Sharyl White, BA, MCP, PCHC; Dustin Corey, PCHC; Robert Zavaleta, PCHC; Bethany McLeman, Project Director; Phoebe Gauthier, Co-Director; and Tess Gallant, Research Coordinator.
NIDA CCTN Liaison
Udi Ghitza, PhD
Project Summary
Pharmacists remain an underutilized resource in the treatment of opioid use disorder (OUD). Although studies have engaged pharmacists in dispensing medications in OUD treatment (MOUD), few studies have evaluated collaborative care models in which pharmacists are an active, integral part of a primary care team offering OUD care. In this Phase 1 project, we seek to leverage a promising model of pharmacist-integrated care for OUD to 1) employ a mixed methods approach to evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of implementing a pharmacist-integrated model of MOUD into the clinical workflow of a diverse array of clinical sites and 2) evaluate the impact of the pharmacist-integrated model on the clinical sites’ capacity for MOUD care and on patient engagement in OUD care.
Public Health Relevance:
This project will provide novel empirical information about how to optimally engage pharmacies as key partners in collaborative, integrated care models designed to expand access to evidence-based medication treatment for OUD.
CTN-0103: Expanding Clinical Research Training on Implementing the Evidence-based Hub and Spoke Model of Medication-Assisted Treatment for Opioid Use Disorder (NIH HEAL Initiative) (CTN-0103)
Funding Source
NIH HEAL Initiative
Principal Investigator
Lisa A. Marsch, PhD (PI, Northeast Node, Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth College)
Project Summary
As part of an ongoing teleECHO learning collaborative (LC), this study will expand clinical research training in evidence-based quality improvement methods that were central to delivering and sustaining science-based medication-assisted treatment for opioid use disorder (MOUD) within the Vermont Hub-and-Spoke Model (HSM). Participating primary care practices will be trained in the 1) use of a study-developed toolkit of research and evaluation quality improvement methods intended to expand provider knowledge and performance in the delivery of evidence-based MOUD, 2) systematic tracking of standardized outcome metrics, and 3) sharing of standardized data with other LC members so that practices can use this empirical information to refine their care model over time. The study will measure changes in providers’ knowledge about best practices for MOUD, their comfort in caring for OUD patients with MOUD, and their performance on all the standardized outcome metrics.As part of an ongoing teleECHO learning collaborative (LC), this study will expand clinical research training in evidence-based quality improvement methods that were central to delivering and sustaining science-based medication-assisted treatment for opioid use disorder (MOUD) within the Vermont Hub-and-Spoke Model (HSM). Participating primary care practices will be trained in the 1) use of a study-developed toolkit of research and evaluation quality improvement methods intended to expand provider knowledge and performance in the delivery of evidence-based MOUD, 2) systematic tracking of standardized outcome metrics, and 3) sharing of standardized data with other LC members so that practices can use this empirical information to refine their care model over time. The study will measure changes in providers’ knowledge about best practices for MOUD, their comfort in caring for OUD patients with MOUD, and their performance on all the standardized outcome metrics.
CTN-0102-XR: Rural Expansion of Medication Treatment for Opioid Use Disorder: Randomized Controlled Pilot Trial of Extended-release Buprenorphine vs. Sublingual Buprenorphine-naloxone in Rural Settings
Funding Source
NIDA Clinical Trials Network (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Project Period
3/1/2024 - 2/28/2026
Principal Investigators
Yih-Ing Hser, PhD, UCLA, Larissa Mooney, MD, UCLA
Site
Seaport Community Health Center, Belfast, Maine
Site Principal Investigator
Denise Bouchard, FNP-C
Northeast Node Project Staff
Lisa Marsch, PhD, Bethany McLeman, and Kathleen Bell.
Project Summary
This randomized, open-label pilot study will assess the feasibility, acceptability, and effectiveness of extended-release buprenorphine (XR-BUP, CAM2038), compared with sublingual buprenorphine-naloxone (SL-BUP) for treatment of opioid use disorder (OUD) among rural patients. Relative effectiveness of XR-BUP vs SL-BUP in rural populations with OUD has not been subjected to research, and this project seeks to rapidly develop new knowledge on the issues to support future large-scale trials. Findings will suggest possible next steps for additional research and will inform scaling of the implementation to improve capacity to utilize extended-release MOUD and increase MOUD access and uptake of extended-release MOUD in rural communities.
CTN-0102: Rural Expansion of Medication Treatment for Opioid Use Disorder (Rural MOUD)
Funding Source
NIDA Clinical Trials Network (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Project Period
3/1/2019 - 2/28/2022
Principal Investigator
Yih-Ing Hser, PhD, UCLA
Sites
Seaport Community Health Center, Belfast, ME
Winterport Community Health Center, Winterport, ME
Site Principal Investigators
Denise Bouchard, FNP-C, Seaport Community Health Center
David Thayer, FNP, Winterport Community Health Center
Northeast Node Project Staff
Lisa Marsch, PhD, Bethany McLeman, and Emily Hichborn.
Project Summary
People who use opioids in rural areas suffer worse health and less insurance coverage. The opioid problem in rural areas is of particular concern, as rural areas have higher overdose rates despite equivalent rates of OUD. This is because rural areas have a scant number of clinics and clinicians who provide medication treatment for OUD. Thus, people living in rural areas must travel long distances to access clinics that may or may not have expertise in providing treatment to patients with OUD. Telemedicine (TM) could efficiently increase capacity for delivery of buprenorphine in rural areas and may increase the number of patients receiving medication treatment and improve treatment retention and outcomes. While the development of medication treatment for opioid use disorder (MOUD) capacity in primary care settings with optimal /comprehensive services is desirable, the current opioid crisis with escalating overdose death rates in rural areas suggests a need to implement an efficient, cost-effective system of MOUD services that can be scaled up quickly. The use of a centralized and Medicare covered TM vendor utilizing a developed methodology and established organizational infrastructure offers the great potential for a rapid roll-out to increase access to MOUD and improve treatment retention in rural areas. This cluster-randomized clinical trial with two phases will test expanded treatment access to improve retention on MOUD in highly impacted rural areas. Phase 1 will include implementing telemedicine in a limited number of rural sites with varying levels of OBOT to inform implementation strategies for the main trial and Phase II will include evaluate comparative effectiveness between office-base opioid treatment (OBOT) vs OBOT + TM in 30 sites.
CTN-0101: Subthreshold Opioid Use Disorder Prevention (STOP) Trial (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Funding Source
NIDA Clinical Trials Network (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Project Period
6/1/2019 – 1/31/2023
Principal Investigator
Jennifer McNeely, MD, MS (NYU); Jane Liebschutz, MD, MPH (University of Pittsburgh)
Site
D-H Manchester; Bedford Primary Care
Site Principal Investigator
Hyunouk Hong, DO
Other Project Staff
Lisa Marsch, PhD (Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth College) and Hyunouk Hong, DO (Dartmouth-Hitchcock at Manchester) (Site PIs). Northeast Node Team Members: Bethany McLeman, Emma Fredyma, Emily Halliday, Avery Turner, and Nico Agosti.
Project Summary
Even in the midst of an opioid crisis that is driven by a high prevalence of untreated opioid use disorder (OUD), it is critically important to focus on prevention of OUD among individuals with subthreshold OUD. Subthreshold OUD is opioid use that is not severe enough to meet diagnostic criteria for moderate-severe OUD (that would require medication and more intensive treatment). As defined here, subthreshold OUD includes individuals with problem opioid use or mild OUD symptoms. Individuals with subthreshold OUD engage in risky opioid use behavior, which includes nonmedical use of prescribed opioids (taking a higher dose or taking an opioid more frequently than prescribed), any use of illicit opioids, or taking pharmaceutical opioids that were not prescribed to them. Although a minority (18%) of the 12 million Americans with past year illicit or nonmedical opioid use have an OUD, all of them are at high risk of developing OUD in the future.
This randomized clinical trial aims to examine the efficacy of a primary care Subthreshold Opioid Use Disorder Prevention (STOP) intervention to reduce opioid use and overdose risk, and to prevent progression of OUD in adult patients with risky opioid use. Specifically, STOP is a behavioral early intervention strategy targeting individuals with subthreshold OUD, with a goal of preventing the development of moderate-severe OUD. STOP is a collaborative care model consisting of (1) a practice-embedded nurse care manager (NCM) who provides patient participant education and supports the primary care provider (PCP) in engaging and monitoring patient participants who have risky opioid use; (2) brief advice delivered to patient participants by their PCP; and (3) telephonic health coaching of patient participants to motivate and support behavior change. Patient participants who fail to improve after the telephone health coaching sessions are stepped up to receive additional health coaching sessions that incorporate motivational interviewing and cognitive behavioral therapy.
A cluster-randomized trial, randomized at the level of the PCP, aims to test the efficacy of STOP versus enhanced usual care (EUC). The trial will be conducted in five primary care sites, and across all sites will enroll approximately 60 PCPs and 480 adult primary care patients. Additionally, a pilot study conducted at D-H Manchester and Bedford (one site, two locations), will test the recruitment, enrollment and survey procedures in advance of the main trial.
Public Health Relevance
Like any public health epidemic, the opioid crisis requires a multi-pronged strategy that includes prevention as well as effective treatment. Primary care practices are optimally positioned to provide early intervention for unhealthy opioid use, but they are underutilized. The STOP intervention, if proven efficacious, will provide a solution to preventing OUD among patients who are most at risk, thus addressing a key aspect of the opioid epidemic.
CTN-0100: Optimizing Retention, Duration, and Discontinuation Strategies for Opioid Use Disorder Pharmacotherapy (RDD)
Funding Source
NIDA CTN (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Principal Investigator
Edward V. Nunes, Jr., MD (Greater New York Node, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons and New York State Psychiatric Institute); John Rotrosen, MD (Greater New York Node, NYU School of Medicine); Roger D. Weiss, MD (New England Consortium; McLean Hospital Division of Alcohol and Drug Abuse)
Site
Dartmouth-Hitchcock Addiction Treatment Program
Site Principal Investigator
Luke Archibald, MD
Project Summary
This study will 1) test strategies to improve OUD pharmacotherapy treatment retention and to improve outcomes among patients who have been successfully stabilized on OUD medications and want to stop medication; and 2) identify predictors of successful outcome and develop a stage model of relapse risk. Funded by the NIH HEAL Initiative.
CTN-0084-A2: Harnessing Digital Health to Understand Clinical Trajectories of Opioid Use Disorder (D-TECT)
Funding Source
NIDA CTN (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Principal Investigator
Lisa Marsch, PhD, Dartmouth College; Cynthia Campbell, PhD, Kaiser Permanente
Project Summary
This is an observational study designed to (1) evaluate the feasibility and utility of digital health technology in a MOUD treatment population, and (2) capitalize on the availability of EHR data to relate passive and active sensing data to treatment retention and medication adherence. Fifty participants, in active treatment with buprenorphine for OUD, will be recruited from designated recruitment clinics at Kaiser Permanente in Northern California.
CTN-0083: Using Social Media to Deliver HIV Self-Testing Kits and Link to Online PrEP Services
Funding Source
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigators
Lisa A. Marsch, PhD (PI, Northeast Node, Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth College), Jeffrey D. Klausner, MD, MPH (University of California, Los Angeles)
Project Summary
The risk of HIV infection is magnified for men who have sex with men (MSM), especially minority MSM < 30 years of age and with substance use problems. A promising approach to HIV prevention among this high-risk population is the targeted promotion of HIV self-testing, simplified access to test kits and seamless linkage to pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) medication. This project seeks to compare the relative effectiveness of using social media sites versus informational sites like to promote HIV self-testing and PrEP uptake. MSM between 18-30 years old will receive culturally-relevant advertisements targeting minorities similar to those previously developed. Specifically, the study aims to 1) adapt existing social media-based HIV self-testing and PrEP advertising materials for digital distribution on social media and informational sites and 2) compare the effectiveness of HIV testing and PrEP uptake promotion across social media sites versus online informational platforms.
CTN-0099: Emergency Department-INitiated bupreNOrphine and VAlidaTIOn Network Trial (ED-INNOVATION)
Funding Source
NIDA Clinical Trials Network (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Principal Investigators
Gail D’Onofrio, MD, MS (Yale University), David Fiellin, MD (Yale University)
Sites
Maine Medical Center, Portland, ME
Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Lebanon, NH
Site Principal Investigators
XX, MD, Maine Medical Center
Patricia Lanter, MD, Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center
Project Summary
Emergency Department (ED) initiated buprenorphine/naloxone (BUP) with referral for ongoing BUP is superior to referral alone in engaging patients with untreated opioid use disorder (OUD) in treatment at 30 days and is cost effective. However, logistical barriers exist in translating research into practice. New BUP formulations such as the extended-release injectable BUP (CAM2038, XR-BUP) hold promise in addressing many of the barriers more effectively than sublingual buprenorphine (SL-BUP) by treating the patients’ symptoms for up to 7 days. This study will recruit, train, and provide resources to up to 30 Emergency Department (ED) sites throughout the U.S. using implementation facilitation strategies to address stigma and provide ED-initiated BUP for patients presenting with OUD who are not receiving medications for OUD.
Once implementation is adequately achieved, the sites will conduct a randomized controlled trial (RCT) to compare the effectiveness of SL-BUP versus XR-BUP on ED patients’ engagement in formal addiction treatment 7-days after their ED visit. In addition, in an ancillary component of the study, the use of XR-BUP will be assessed in ED patients with Clinical Opioid Withdrawal Scale (COWS) scores < 8 in a case series to potentially expand the eligibility of patients in the larger RCT to those presenting with little to no opioid withdrawal symptoms. Electronic health record (EHR) phenotypes of opioid-related illnesses will be developed and validated to characterize ED visits, better identify patients eligible for study inclusion, and facilitate future capacity for predictive analytics.
CTN-0079-A1: Ancillary Study of the Adoption and Sustainability of ED-Initiated Buprenorphine
Funding Source
NIDA Clinical Trials Network (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Principal Investigators
Ryan McCormack, MD (New York University), Kathryn Hawk, MD, MHS (Yale University), John Rotrosen, MD (New York University)
Sites
Catholic Medical Center, Manchester, NH
Bellevue Medical Center, New York, NY
Site Principal Investigators
Jeremy Arnold, MD, Catholic Medical Center
Ryan McCormack, MD, Bellevue Medical Center
Northeast Node Project Staff
Lisa Marsch, PhD, Phoebe Gauthier, MS, MPH, Kelsey Veilleux, MD, and Nico Agosti, BA.
Project Summary
For many reasons, the Emergency Department (ED) is a critical venue to initiate opioid use disorder (OUD) interventions. ED patients have a disproportionately high prevalence of substance use disorders and are at an elevated risk of overdose, and many do not access healthcare elsewhere. Despite this, OUD interventions are rarely initiated in EDs. The Emergency Department Connection to Care with Buprenorphine for Opioid Use Disorder study (CTN-0079) will assess the feasibility, acceptability, and impact of introducing clinical protocols for screening for OUD, buprenorphine treatment initiation, and referral for ongoing treatment in ED settings with high need, limited resources, and different staffing structures. This extension study will use the existing infrastructure to evaluate the adoption and sustainability of the clinical protocols introduced in the study sites and to identify factors influencing their diffusion and effectiveness.
CTN-0079: Emergency Department Connection to Care with Buprenorphine for Opioid Use Disorder (ED-CONNECT)
Funding Source
NIDA Clinical Trials Network (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Principal Investigators
Ryan McCormack, MD (New York University), Kathryn Hawk, MD, MHS (Yale University), John Rotrosen, MD (New York University)
Sites
Valley Regional Hospital, Claremont, NH
Catholic Medical Center, Manchester, NH
Bellevue Medical Center, New York, NY
Site Principal Investigators
Randolph Knight, MD, Valley Regional Hospital
William Goodman, MD, Catholic Medical Center
Ryan McCormack, MD, Bellevue Medical Center
Northeast Node Project Staff
Lisa Marsch, PhD, Phoebe Gauthier, MS, MPH, Kelsey Veilleux, MD, Nico Agosti, BA, and Bethany McLeman, BA.
Project Summary
The opioid epidemic has reached a critical state, drawing widespread attention and support to address this public health crisis. For many reasons, the Emergency Department (ED) is a critical venue to initiate opioid use disorder (OUD) interventions. ED patients have a disproportionately high prevalence of substance use disorders, are at an elevated risk of overdose, and many do not access healthcare elsewhere. Despite this, OUD interventions are rarely initiated in EDs. As a complement to the CTN-0069 protocol, this study will evaluate the feasibility, acceptability, and impact of introducing a clinical protocol for OUD screening, buprenorphine (sublingual or extended-release) treatment initiation, and referral to ongoing OUD medication treatment in ED settings with high need, limited resources, and differing staffing structures.
CTN-0073: Towards Detecting Cocaine Use Using Smartwatches in the NIDA Clinical Trials Network
Funding
NIDA CTN
Project Period
6/1/16-5/31/19
Principal Investigators
Lisa A. Marsch, PhD (Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth); Santosh Kumar, PhD (University of Memphis)
Site
Johns Hopkins University
Site Principal Investigator
August Holtyn, PhD
Other Project Staff
Dr. Emre Ertin (sensor expert who designed AutoSense and EasySense sensors at Ohio State); Dr. Kenzie Preston (Chief of the Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics Research Branch at the NIDA Intramural Research Center); Dr. August Holtyn (Research Associate at the Center for Learning and Health at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine); Dr. Udi Ghitza (CCTN); Dr. Dee Blumberg (CCC); Jennifer McCormack (DSC); Shahin Samiei (University of Memphis); Andrea Meier (Dartmouth); Bethany McLeman (Dartmouth); Samantha Auty (Dartmouth);Carmen Rosa (CCTN); Syed Hossain (University of Memphis); Massoud Vahabzadeh (Chief of the Biomedical Informatics Section at the NIDA Intramural Research Center); Jia-Ling Lin (Biomedical Informatics Section at the NIDA Intramural Research Center); Mustafa Mezghanni (Biomedical Informatics Section at the NIDA Intramural Research Center)
Project Summary
The goal of this project is to investigate methods to detect cocaine use from heart rate data captured by smartwatches, so this approach can be deployed widely in the NIDA Clinical Trials Network (CTN). This method will enable us to automatically detect cocaine use and the precise timing of such use. And, this approach can nicely complement self-report methods that suffer from temporal inaccuracy in reporting cocaine use in the field setting. Detection of cocaine use via smartwatches will build upon, and extend, our recently developed methods to identify cocaine use from interbeat interval heart rate data obtained from electrocardiogram (ECG) sensors and physical activity from accelerometer data.
The specific aims of the project are:
1.Develop a smartwatch device that can reliably detect interbeat interval and can last the entire day on a single charge of battery with continuous sensor data collection.
2.Conduct a user study to determine the feasibility of using smartwatches to collect reliable interbeat interval and physical activity data in the natural field setting. This study will provide the data necessary to determine under what conditions high quality data can be obtained from smartwatches, identify common failure scenarios, and understand wearability/usage patterns.
3.Adapt the computational model for detecting cocaine use from interbeat interval, so it can be applied to the interbeat and physical activity data obtained from smartwatches. We will also assess the degree of specificity of the model relative to other stimulant use.
Public Health Relevance
Illicit drug use results in significant consequences including morbidity, mortality and health care costs. Detection of cocaine use relies heavily on inaccurate self-report or intrusive urine screens. Detection by smart watches offer many benefits to researchers, providers and consumers.
CTN-0062-A1: Implementing the Tobacco, Alcohol, Prescription Medication, and Other Substances (TAPS) Tool in Rural Federally-Qualified Health Centers
Funding Source
NIDA Clinical Trials Network (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Principal Investigator
Jennifer McNeely, MD, MS (NYU)
Sites
Penobscot Community Health Care, Bangor, ME
Brewer Family Health Center, Brewer, ME
Helen Hunt Health Center, Old Towne, ME
Site Principal Investigators
Noah Nesin, MD, Trip Gardner, MD, Penobscot Community Health Care
Northeast Node Project Staff
Lisa Marsch, PhD, Elizabeth Saunders, PhD, Sarah K. Moore, PhD, Chantal Lambert-Harris, MA, Robyn Young, and Bethany McLeman, BA.
Project Summary
This study aims to: 1) program the TAPS Tool and decision support into the health system’s electronic health record (EHR), 2) study the process of implementation of screening and referral using EHR-driven CDEs and clinical decision support in three federally qualified health center primary care clinics, and 3) evaluate the impact of implementation on patient, provider, and systems level outcomes.
Active CTN Research Studies
Buprenorphine-Precipitated Withdrawal Hotspots and Correlates: Identifying Regional “Hotspots” and Potential Correlates of Precipitated Withdrawal During Buprenorphine Induction in Fentanyl Users Through Prescriber Survey Responses and Patient Urine Drug Test Results
In Development
Funding Source
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
LaTrice Montgomery, PhD; T. John Winhusen, PhD
Project Summary
This study has two primary aims. Aim 1 is to characterize the regional variability in the prevalence of prescriber-reported precipitated withdrawal during buprenorphine induction for individuals using fentanyl in > 250 counties in the U.S. Aim 2 is to identify potential correlates of buprenorphine-precipitated withdrawal in fentanyl users.
Exploring Health Beliefs for Community Engagement and Diversity in Clinical Trials
In Development
Funding Source
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Kimberly Page, PhD, MPH, MS
Project Summary
Improving inclusion and engagement of diverse populations in clinical research can broaden the relevance and translation of research findings into practice. This project will develop a toolkit aimed at advancing inclusion and engagement of diverse and minority populations in clinical research. The toolkit will provide researchers and community partners a guide to taking individual, cultural, and structural perspectives into consideration when proposing clinical research. This project will take place southern New Mexico, an area with a highly diverse population, where many groups are impacted by Opiate Use Disorder and there has been low clinical trial engagement. We will examine, adapt, test, and produce a clinical research engagement toolkit that can be used to enhance engagement in clinical research by addressing both individual and structural barriers to engagement.
Ketamine for Methamphetamine Use Disorder (KMD)
In Development
Funding Source
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Madhukar Trivedi, MD
Project Summary
The proposed pilot study would explore the feasibility and help in determining the effect size for a larger, multi-site trial of intravenous (IV) ketamine in Methamphetamine Use Disorder with the following specific aims:
Aim 1: To conduct a pilot study to determine the feasibility (completed treatments), initial signal (number of negative UDS), and safety with 6 weeks (12 infusions) of IV ketamine versus midazolam in individuals with MUD.
Aim 2: To evaluate the efficacy and safety of ketamine compared to midazolam during the additional 6 weeks of the observational follow-up period (12 week assessment).
Methadone or Enhanced Buprenorphine to Address Retention Among Patients Not Optimally Benefitting from Office-based Buprenorphine - a Hybrid Effectiveness/Implementation Trial
In Development
Funding Source
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
David Fiellin, MD
Project Summary
There is a need to address sub-optimal retention in office-based buprenorphine (BUP) and expand access to methadone outside of opioid treatment programs (OTP). Clinicians currently have 2 options for patients not optimally benefitting from office-based BUP. They can attempt to enhance BUP services or refer the patient to an OTP for methadone. We propose to evaluate a needed new option – office-based methadone prescribing (under special arrangements) with off-site methadone dispensing. Investigators propose to conduct hybrid effectiveness implementation trial to compare: 1) Office-based methadone where the current office-based BUP prescriber manages a switch to and continuation of methadone in partnership with a local methadone dispensing facility versus; 2) Enhanced BUP where the office-based BUP provider continues BUP treatment while providing enhanced behavioral treatment and/or implementing strategies to address adherence if indicated. Investigators will use mixed methods and an implementation science framework to identify implementation barriers and facilitators at the patient, provider and health-systems level for office-based methadone.
Quantifying How Cocaine Users Respond to Fentanyl Contamination in Cocaine
In Development
Funding Source
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Cecilia Nunez
Project Summary
The increased presence of fentanyl in cocaine has drastically increased cocaine-related overdoses, yet there is no research quantifying how cocaine users respond to fentanyl adulteration. In this online study, a modification of a behavioral economics measure, the Cocaine Purchase Task, will quantify for the first time how cocaine users respond to fentanyl contamination in cocaine. This study aims to 1) Determine how possible fentanyl adulteration affects cocaine demand, and 2) Determine which individual characteristics moderate the relationship between fentanyl adulteration and cocaine demand. Determining how possible fentanyl adulteration affects cocaine demand can help inform the development of effective harm reduction interventions for people who use cocaine to address the worsening crisis of opioid related deaths.
The Great Plains Initiative
In Development
Funding Source
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Donald Warne, MD, MPH; T. John Winhusen, PhD
Project Summary
The Great Plains Initiative has two primary aims. Aim 1 is to determine community-defined needs for identifying and addressing substance use issues in order to create a Great Plains American Indian substance use research agenda. Such issues may involve a broad range of topics, such as specific substance misuse, barriers to treatment, the role of historical trauma in substance use, mistrust of research, and others as determined through the Community-based participatory research process. Aim 2 is to explore the feasibility of promoting the use of telehealth platforms to promote access to and utilization of medication for opioid use disorder treatment in tribal communities in the Great Plains.
Adherence and Feasibility of Wearable Technologies and Ecological Momentary Assessment to Assess Autonomic Function and Negative Affect in Opioid Use Disorder
In Development
Funding Source
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Veronica Ramirez
Project Summary
Negative Affect (NA) and stress are key features of Opioid Use Disorder (OUD) and often lead to drug use and relapse. The Autonomic Nervous System (ANS) dominates physiological responses to emotions and stress, yet its function and how it unfolds over time and in real-world settings remains understudied in the context of OUD. With new wearable technologies, ANS function can be measured through heart rate variability (HRV) and can be recorded continuously via wearable sensors, providing a non-invasive method to examine physiological mechanisms underlying stress and NA in real-world settings and in real-time. The present research will serve as a pilot study to assess 1. The role of autonomic function (indexed by HRV) as a marker of NA and stress in people with OUD 2. Participants’ adherence to wearing sensor devices and response rates to daily questionnaires. To achieve these objectives, we will monitor participants for 14 days and quantify self-reports measures of stress, overall daytime HRV patterns, and the magnitude, frequency, and duration of reduced HRV instances. Our findings can help advance technologies to address the opioid epidemic, and our understanding of physiological markers as objective measures and predictors of NA and stress in OUD.
Engaging African American Faith-Based Leaders in a Substance Use Learning Collaborative
In Development
Funding Source
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Holly Hagle, PhD
Project Summary
The long-term goal of this pilot study is to increase access to Substance Use Disorder (SUD) care for African Americans by engaging faith-based Leaders (FBLs) through a learning collaborative (LC) model. Based on the Institute for Healthcare Improvement model, a LC is a short-term (6- to 15-month) learning system that brings together teams (e.g., FBLs, community members, behavioral health/SUD and social service providers) to seek improvement in a focused topic area. The immediate goal of this project is to increase FBLs knowledge of substance use and SUDs and to assess FBLs perceptions of engaging with behavioral health providers (BHPs) by implementing an existing LC curriculum. This pilot exploratory project will pave the way for future initiatives focused on increasing SUD care in underserved Black communities through collaborations between FBLs and BHPs.
Longitudinal Follow-up of Individuals with Opioid Use Disorder
In Development
Funding Source
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Kathryn Hefner, PhD; R. Kathryn McHugh, PhD; Rebecca Ottesen; Matisyahu Shulman, MD
Project Summary
The primary aim of the Longitudinal Follow-up of Individuals with Opioid Use Disorder (LFU-OUD) study is to establish initial and long-term feasibility of participant registration, retention, engagement, and data collection in a longitudinal study, linked to participating CTN clinical trials, that follows individuals with OUD. Secondary aims will address key scientific questions using core follow-up data and trial-specific longitudinal data elements for participating trials. Scientific inquiries will be geared toward investigating questions such as: characterizing the long-term course of OUD (outcomes of opioid and other substance use, mortality, functional outcomes and engagement in treatment); evaluating treatment participation status at follow-up, treatment retention over time, and effects of each type of opioid replacement treatment on opioid use and other recovery milestones; and identifying predictors of long-term OUD outcomes (treatment-related factors (e.g., type of MOUD), participant sociodemographic characteristics, and participant clinical factors (e.g., co-occurring psychiatric disorders).
Integrative Data Analysis of CTN Studies to Examine the Impact of Psychosocial Treatments for Black People who use Cocaine
In Development
Funding Source
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Kathy Burlew, PhD; Lesia Ruglass, PhD
Project Summary
The acceleration of opioid-involved overdose deaths among Black people is at least partly attributable to the presence of synthetic opioids (fentanyl) in the cocaine supply in approximately one third of opioid overdose deaths. The CTN provides a unique but underexplored collection of studies that can improve our knowledge on effective psychosocial treatments for Black people who use cocaine. The proposed study will combine data from 7 CTN treatment studies (total N = 1442 Black participants) that in combination present mixed findings. Using multiple emerging measurement/data analysis frameworks (integrative data analysis (IDA), meta-analysis of individual patient data (MIPD), and causal moderation analysis), the goal of the proposed study is to evaluate the effectiveness of substance use disorder treatments for Black people who use cocaine.
Assessment and Design of a Cost-Effective Collaborative MOUD Delivery System
In Development
Funding Source
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Davis Gustafson, PhD
Project Summary
This small pilot study will utilize interviews of commercial pharmacy administrators and staff to explore the feasibility of scaling up access to medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD) through pharmacies. Using a system design model approach, we will identify barriers and facilitators to this scale up and explore differences in feasibility by MOUD type (e.g., methadone, transmucosal buprenorphine, injectable buprenorphine, injectable naltrexone). The data from this study will be used to help design a sustainable system that enables pharmacy-clinician collaboration to widely and cost-effectively increase MOUD access across urban, suburban, and rural settings.
Facebook Intervention for Preventing Opioid Relapse Among American Indian Women
In Development
Funding Source
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Christi A. Patten, PhD
Project Summary
AIAN gender-specific interventions for OUD do not exist. Research has documented the positive impact of social networks and social support on abstinence from substance use. However, understanding how best to leverage social support remains a key challenge for the addictions treatment field. Consistent with the AIAN cultural value of interdependence, social media formed groups to prevent opioid relapse could lead to greater adoption and sustainability by encouraging collaborative efforts across generations of AIAN women and leveraging community resilience for coping with stress. The overall objective of this one-year, Phase I, pilot preparatory study is to develop and beta-test a Facebook intervention for reducing opioid relapse among AIAN women. This project was designed with community partners at the MN Indian Women’s Resource Center (MIWRC). A study-specific community advisory committee (CAC) will guide all project activities.
Comprehensive Meta-Analysis of CTN Treatment Outcomes by Race and Sex
In Development
Funding Source
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Sarah Mennenga, PhD
Project Summary
Dr. Mennenga developed a master database (from 27 CTN completed trials) to evaluate the likelihood of treatment success across different SUDs (general/mixed, tobacco, opioid, or stimulant), and utilizing different types of interventions (pharmacological vs. behavioral). This study will expand this compiled dataset to include participant-level race and ethnicity data that have been standardize across trials in order to conduct additional meta-analyses examining how the intersection of race and sex impact likelihood of treatment success and likelihood of randomization (vs. screen-fail). Analyses will evaluate whether systematic differences exist in likelihood of treatment success and likelihood of randomization into a CTN trial by race, sex, and their interaction.
Integrated Care and Treatment for Severe Infectious Diseases and Substance Use Disorders (SUD) among Hospitalized Patients
In Development
Funding Source
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Lisa Metsch, PhD; Carlos del Rio, MD
Project Summary
The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine (NASEM) refer to opioid use disorder (OUD) and infectious diseases as “inextricably linked.” The OUD epidemic has contributed not only to recent outbreaks of HIV and hepatitis C virus infections across the U.S., but also -- primarily through injecting drugs -- to an increase in severe bacterial and fungal infections such as Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia, infective endocarditis, skin and soft tissue infections, bone and joint infections, and fungemia. This project will study a comprehensive, integrated hospital-based intervention to address concurrent treatment and follow-up support for people who inject drugs with infectious complications. A combined (pharmacologic/behavioral/harm reduction/low barrier communication) intervention approach will be tested to 1) initiate integrated medications for SUD in the hospital concurrently with treatment for infectious complications (e.g., treatment for bacterial, fungal and viral infections including COVID-19) and 2) rapidly transfer and retain patients in (less costly) integrated post-discharge follow-up and outpatient care.
R-MIST: Remote Methadone Ingestion Surveillance Trial
In Development
Funding Source
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Madhukar H. Trivedi, MD
Project Summary
The Remote Methadone Ingestion Surveillance Trial (R-MIST) aims to evaluate the performance and acceptability of two different methods of remote methadone ingestion surveillance that may mitigate patient safety risks of take-home methadone treatment regimens for opioid use disorder (OUD) while minimizing the risk of diversion. Data describing the monitoring performance and patient acceptability of these two methods will inform investigators of the feasibility of using remote surveillance technology to monitor medication for OUD and mitigate treatment barriers. This study will lay the groundwork for a safe and robust remotely monitored methadone treatment platform that addresses long-standing accessibility and acceptability barriers to treatment for OUD.
Impact of Social Distancing Measures, Expansion of Telemedicine for Buprenorphine Prescribing, and Health Insurance Payor on Access to Buprenorphine During the COVID-19 Pandemic
Active
Funding Source
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Jane Liebschutz, M.D., M.P.H., FACP
Project Summary
COVID-19-related social distancing has resulted in disruptions in the delivery of health care. Simultaneously, the synergistic epidemic between the opioid overdose crisis and the COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in major regulatory changes to ease access to medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD) via telemedicine. This study seeks to address the priorities of NIDA by analyzing a dataset with >90% of all US prescriptions to examine the time-varying impact of COVID-19-related social distancing, MOUD prescribing guideline changes, and health insurance on access to buprenorphine.
Examining the COVID-19 Public Health Emergency on Policy, Substance Use Disorder, Treatment and Resilience among American Indian and Alaska Native Communities
In Development
Funding Source
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Katherine Hirchak, PhD
Project Summary
The proposed study will provide the rapid research desperately needed to explicate the consequences of COVID-19 on addiction treatment providers, programs, and American Indian and Alaska Native consumers. This information will inform emergency and disaster related response and longer-term service needs to promote health, well-being, and public health efforts among American Indian, Alaska Native and rural communities.
The Impact of COVID-19 Pandemic on Substance Use Treatment Services
In Development
Funding Source
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Cynthia Campbell, PhD
Project Summary
As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, we are witnessing profound societal and health system developments with significant implications for the treatment of drug use disorders: an increase in drug use, people of color at disproportionate risk for distress and drug use, and a potentially transformational move to virtual treatment modalities. The proposed study examines this major shift to virtual treatment for drug use disorders during the pandemic in a large, diverse health care system, specifically exploring potential disparities in accessing treatment. Virtual treatment is likely to persist as a major delivery model of alcohol treatment, and understanding potential inequities in access is critical to improving quality of care and outcomes for underserved populations.
Pharmacist-Integrated Model of Medication Treatment for Opioid Use Disorder
Active
Funding Source
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Lisa A. Marsch, PhD
Project Summary
Pharmacists remain an underutilized resource in the treatment of opioid use disorder (OUD). Although studies have engaged pharmacists in dispensing medications in OUD treatment (MOUD), few studies have evaluated collaborative care models in which pharmacists are an active, integral part of a primary care team offering OUD care. In this Phase 1 project, we seek to leverage a promising model of pharmacist-integrated care for OUD to 1) employ a mixed methods approach to evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of implementing a pharmacist-integrated model of MOUD into the clinical workflow of a diverse array of clinical sites and 2) evaluate the impact of the pharmacist-integrated model on the clinical site’s capacity for MOUD care and on patient engagement in OUD care.
Developing an Intervention to Address Intersecting Prescription Opioid and Chronic Pain Stigma in Cancer Survivors (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Active
Funding Source
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Hailey Bulls, PhD, MA
Project Summary
Investigators will conduct in-depth qualitative interviews exploring experiences with prescription opioid and chronic pain stigma among cancer survivors prescribed opioids for moderate-to-severe chronic pain and caregivers to identify potential contributors to stigma in cancer survivors, with an emphasis on potential targets of future interventions and long-term health outcomes associated with stigma in survivorship.
Drug Repurposing for Cocaine Use Disorder (CUD) Using a Combined Strategy of Artificial Intelligence (AI)-Based Prediction and Retrospective Clinical Corroboration
Active
Funding Source
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Rong Xu, PhD; T. John Winhusen, PhD
Project Summary
An estimated 5.5 million people aged 12 or older were cocaine users and 977,000 people had a cocaine use disorder (CUD). Currently there are no medications approved to treat CUD. Identifying novel pharmacotherapies for CUD, while a priority, has been challenged by the lack of interest from the pharmaceutical industry and by lengthy traditional drug development processes. Thus, research to repurposing existing drugs may accelerate findings of anti-CUD medications. The goal for this study is to identify and evaluate potential anti-CUD drugs by developing artificial intelligence (AI)-powered drug discovery technologies. The output of this project will be a list of promising anti-CUD candidates that may help expeditiously translate into clinical trials to benefit CUD patients.
Validating a DSM-5 Substance Use Disorder (SUD) Symptom Checklist in EHR Data from a Large Primary Care Sample to Support Future Pragmatic Trials and Chronic Care Management of SUDs in Primary Care
Active
Funding Source
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Emily Williams, PhD, MPH
Project Summary
Primary care (PC) is well-positioned to detect and address substance use (SU) and substance use disorders (SUDs), yet most PC settings have notable gaps in providing SU-related care. This study proposes to leverage a large and novel EHR dataset from Kaiser Permanente Washington, which includes standardized measures of daily cannabis use (~19,089 unique patients) and past-year illicit drug use (~6,045 unique patients), or both (~2,380 unique patients) and a novel patient-reported SUD symptom checklist that is based on the DSM-5 SUD criteria (“DSM-5 checklist”). The aim of this study is to evaluate whether the novel patient-reported DSM-5 SUD symptom checklist, used in routine PC documentation in EHRs, is unidimensional, discriminative, and reflects a continuum of SUD severity. Additionally, the study will evaluate the DSM-5 SUD symptom checklist profiles with age, sex, race, and ethnicity justifications.
Optimal Policies to Improve Methadone Maintenance Adherence Longterm (OPTIMMAL)
In Development
Funding Source
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
A. Robin Williams, MD, MBE
Project Summary
The COVID-19 pandemic triggered relaxed regulations on methadone administration. The clinical outcomes of this altered clinical practice, however, remain to be systematically evaluated. A case-control, quasi-experimental design is proposed to evaluate this impact. A total of 1,200 OUD patients in methadone treatment will be recruited from 10 CTN sites with OTP practice and EHR systems. The cohort will be divided into two study groups (n=600 each) based upon their methadone treatment periods: prior and post COVID pandemic. The focused outcome assessments between the two periods are: (1) Retention rate, abstinence situation, and associations with other covariates; (2) Opioid overdose, fatality, and AE rates; (3) Acceptability and sustainability of reformed OTP. The analysis will be conducted upon EHRs and responses from interviews to both health care providers and study participants.
COVID-19 and Substance Misuse Case Identification Using Data Science: A Retrospective Cohort Study
Active
Funding Source
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Niranjan Karnik, MD, PhD
Project Summary
This project will provide novel and critically important tools in artificial intelligence for the detection of substance misuse and COVID-19 from the electronic health record (EHR). Development and validation of a digital classifier would enable a standardized approach to perform screening on all patient encounters on a daily basis in health systems. We will rigorously develop and test the classifier retrospectively on an existing dataset of 60,000 patients who have been screened for COVID-19. This will serve as the first step towards a comprehensive universal screener that leverages available data in the EHR.
Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Trial of Monthly Injectable Buprenorphine For Methamphetamine Use Disorder (MURB)
In Development
Funding Source
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Steve Shoptaw, PhD
Project Summary
The fourth wave of the opioid crisis involves increasing polydrug stimulant and opiate use. Incidence of overdose deaths due to polysubstance use involving opioids co-occurring with methamphetamine increased from 2017 to 2018 by 14.6%. According to the National Survey on Drug Use and Health in 2018, an estimated 1,867,000 of persons in US aged 12 years and older, reported methamphetamine use in the past year and 1,051 000 reported substance use disorder in the past year involving methamphetamines. There are no effective medications for treating methamphetamine use disorder. This proposal will test the superiority of long-acting buprenorphine (and its kappa antagonist activity) over placebo as a treatment for methamphetamine use disorder among persons who co-use opioids.
Randomized, Placebo-Controlled Trial of Injectable Naltrexone and Monthly Injectable Buprenorphine for Cocaine Use Disorder (CURB-2)
In Development
Funding Source
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Madhukar Trivedi, MD
Project Summary
Cocaine is one of the most commonly abused stimulants globally, and in the US, there are signs of a resurgence of cocaine use. A variety of pharmacotherapies for cocaine use disorderr (CUD) has been explored but so far, no study has findings robust enough to warrant FDA approval. Recent research suggests that a kappa opioid receptor antagonist can curb the negative emotional states associated with stimulant withdrawal that leads to increased craving and drug-seeking behaviors. This protocol builds up on results of the Cocaine Use Reduction with Buprenorphine (CURB) study. It aims to evaluate the safety and efficacy of combined monthly injections of XR-NTX and injectable BUP for CUD compared to placebo.
Innovative Development of Research Engagement Manual (I-DREM): Strategies to Enhance Recruitment and Retention of Black Individuals in CTN-0109 CURB-2
In Development
Funding Source
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Madhukar Trivedi, MD; Hoa Vo, PhD
Project Summary
Information coming soon!
Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation for the Treatment of Methamphetamine/Cocaine Use Disorder
Active
Funding Source
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Kathleen Brady, MD, PhD; Madhukar Trivedi, MD
Project Summary
This pilot study aims to 1) determine the feasibility and effect size for 20 sessions of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) versus sham in adults with a DSM 5 methamphetamine use disorder (MUD) or a cocaine use disorder (CUD); and 2) evaluate the safety of rTMS compared to sham in participants with CUD/MUD at the end of treatment and at a 12-week follow-up.
Peer Recovery Support: A Bridge to Treatment for Overdose Survivors (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Active
Funding Source
NIH Heal Initiative
Principal Investigator
Kelly Barth, DO
Project Summary
This project is a 3-site, randomized controlled trial using Peer Recovery Coaches trained in FORCE (FAVOR Overdose Recovery Coaching Evaluation), who will engage with opioid overdose survivors in the emergency department to get permission to contact them. The Coaches will follow a modified FORCE manual using a tiered approach of engagement, utilizing motivational interviewing and a strengths-based care management approach to engage participants in care and develop a patient-centered recovery plan. The FORCE intervention will be tailored to the participant's needs and will continue for 12 months after enrollment. This intervention will be compared to Treatment as Usual (TAU) in which overdose survivors receive referral to treatment. Outcomes include engagement in formal OUD treatment between groups, retention in treatment, and number of overdoses after enrollment.
Integrating Pharmacy-Based Prevention and Treatment of Opioid and Other Substance Use Disorders: A Survey of Pharmacists and Stakeholders (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Active
Funding Source
NIH Heal Initiative
Principal Investigator
Li-Tzy Wu, SCD, RN, MA
Project Summary
This study will use mixed methods to study pharmacists’ knowledge of, attitudes about, and intention to provide patient care and services for Screening for substance use, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) for substance use disorders (SUDs) and Medication treatment for Opioid Use Disorders (MOUD). The findings will inform barriers and facilitators related to pharmacist-provided services and patient care for SBIRT and MOUD. A survey instrument for assessing such barriers and facilitators will be developed.
Healthcare Provider Stigma Related to the Opioid Use Epidemic and Its Impact on Patient Treatment and Clinical Management (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Active
Funding Source
NIH Heal Initiative
Principal Investigator
Lisa Metsch, PhD
Project Summary
Provider stigma - defined as negative attitudes, perceptions, and behaviors that providers embody and enact (sometimes subtly or involuntarily) towards their patients – poses one critical barrier to effective delivery of care. Understanding the science of such stigma, especially in primary care setting, is critical to change providers’ mindset regarding opioid use disorders to one that can be successfully managed in primary care in alignment with other chronic conditions. This study will address these issues by conducting a national provider survey of the general practice workforce (primary care physicians, medical specialists, and dentists). A representative sample will be drawn from federally qualified health care centers and other health care settings to better understand their attitudes and stigma towards substance use disorders and its impact on treatment and clinical management. Specific aims are: (1) to define the scope of provider stigma towards drug use by substance type, and compared to other medical conditions; (2) compare providers’ screening, treatment and referral practices for drug use to their screening, treatment and referral practices for other medical conditions; (3) identify factors related to delivery of drug use treatment in U.S.-based primary care settings to inform educational and intervention strategies addressing provider stigma.
Rural Expansion of Medication Assisted Treatment (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Active
Funding Source
NIDA CTN (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Project Period
6/1/19-5/31/20
Principal Investigator
Yih-Ing Hser, PhD (University of California, Los Angeles, Lead Investigator); Larissa Mooney (University of California, Los Angeles, Co-Lead Investigator)
Other Project Staff
Andrew Saxon, MD (University of Washington, Co-Investigator), Todd Korthuis, MD (OHSU, Co-Investigator), Megan Curtis, PhD (UCLA, Project Manager), Yanping Liu, MD, PhD (NIDA, Protocol Officer), Dikla Blumberg, PhD (Emmes, Protocol Specialist), Paul Van Veldhuisen, PhD (Emmes), Maria Hanano (UCLA), Lisa Marsch (Dartmouth), Bethany McLeman (Dartmouth College)
Project Summary
This cluster-randomized clinical trial with two phases will test expanded treatment access to improve retention on medication treatment for opioid use disorder (MOUD) in highly impacted rural areas. Phase 1 will include implementing telemedicine in a limited number of rural sites with varying levels of OBOT to inform implementation strategies for the main trial and Phase II will include evaluate comparative effectiveness between office-base opioid treatment (OBOT) vs OBOT + telemedicine (TM) in 30 sites.
Public Health Relevance
The dramatic increases in opioid overdose deaths across the nation, particularly in rural areas call for a rapid expansion of access to medication treatment for opioid use disorder (MOUD) in order to effectively address this public health crisis. While office-based opioid treatment (OBOT) is the current standard for MOUD, uptake of OBOT in rural areas has been slow. There is a need to study effective ways to expand treatment access and improve retention on MOUD in highly impacted rural areas.
COVID Impact on Rural Expansion of Medication Treatment for Opioid Use Disorder
In Development
Funding Source
NIDA NIH
Principal Investigator
Yih-Ing Hser, PhD
Project Summary
This study will build upon the Rural Expansion of Medication Treatment for Opioid Use Disorder (Rural MOUD, CTN-0102) to investigate and assess the impact of COVID on telemedicine practices and access to MOUD in rural communities. Study specific aims include 1) to assess changes in MOUD access and services (especially TM) in rural primary care settings over the COVID pandemic, and 2) to assess changes in OUD patients’ substance use (particularly opioids) and health conditions over the COVID pandemic.
Subthreshold Opioid Use Disorder Prevention (STOP) Trial (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Active
Funding Source
NIDA Clinical Trials Network (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Project Period
6/1/2019 – 1/31/2023
PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR
Jennifer McNeely, MD, MS (NYU) and Jane Liebschutz, MD, MPH (University of Pittsburgh)
Other Project Staff
Lisa Marsch, PhD (Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth College) and Hyunouk Hong, DO (Dartmouth-Hitchcock at Manchester) (Site PIs). Team Members: Nadia Abdo, Bethany McLeman, Pamela Hofley, Rebecca Shore, Noa Appleton, Amanda Bunting, Sarah Farkas, Valarie Weinzierl, Alissa Eugeni, Joohahn Kim, MarySue Brissette, Kim Danis Eve Jelstrom, Leslie Revoredo, Kristen Antonellis, Jennifer Neal-Jimenez, Brett Hart, Jen McCormack, Gail Potter, Lauren Yesko, Rebecca Price, Ashley Case, Tobie Kim, Kathryn Hefner, Margaret Kline, and Geetha Subramaniam
Project Summary
Even in the midst of an opioid crisis that is driven by a high prevalence of untreated opioid use disorder (OUD), it is critically important to focus on prevention of OUD among individuals with subthreshold OUD. Subthreshold OUD is opioid use that is not severe enough to meet diagnostic criteria for moderate-severe OUD (that would require medication and more intensive treatment). As defined here, subthreshold OUD includes individuals with problem opioid use or mild OUD symptoms. Individuals with subthreshold OUD engage in risky opioid use behavior, which includes nonmedical use of prescribed opioids (taking a higher dose or taking an opioid more frequently than prescribed), any use of illicit opioids, or taking pharmaceutical opioids that were not prescribed to them. Although a minority (18%) of the 12 million Americans with past year illicit or nonmedical opioid use have an OUD, all of them are at high risk of developing OUD in the future.
This randomized clinical trial aims to examine the efficacy of a primary care Subthreshold Opioid Use Disorder Prevention (STOP) intervention to reduce opioid use and overdose risk, and to prevent progression of OUD in adult patients with risky opioid use. Specifically, STOP is a behavioral early intervention strategy targeting individuals with subthreshold OUD, with a goal of preventing the development of moderate-severe OUD. STOP is a collaborative care model consisting of (1) a practice-embedded nurse care manager (NCM) who provides patient participant education and supports the primary care provider (PCP) in engaging and monitoring patient participants who have risky opioid use; (2) brief advice delivered to patient participants by their PCP; and (3) telephonic health coaching of patient participants to motivate and support behavior change. Patient participants who fail to improve after the telephone health coaching sessions are stepped up to receive additional health coaching sessions that incorporate motivational interviewing and cognitive behavioral therapy.
A cluster-randomized trial, randomized at the level of the PCP, aims to test the efficacy of STOP versus enhanced usual care (EUC). The trial will be conducted in five primary care sites, and across all sites will enroll approximately 60 PCPs and 480 adult primary care patients. Additionally, a pilot study conducted at D-H Manchester and Bedford (one site, two locations), will test the recruitment, enrollment and survey procedures in advance of the main trial.
Public Health Relevance
Like any public health epidemic, the opioid crisis requires a multi-pronged strategy that includes prevention as well as effective treatment. Primary care practices are optimally positioned to provide early intervention for unhealthy opioid use, but they are underutilized. The STOP intervention, if proven efficacious, will provide a solution to preventing OUD among patients who are most at risk, thus addressing a key aspect of the opioid epidemic.
Optimizing Retention, Duration, and Discontinuation Strategies for Opioid Use Disorder Pharmacotherapy (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Active
Funding Source
NIDA CTN (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Principal Investigator
Edward V. Nunes, Jr., MD (Greater New York Node, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons and New York State Psychiatric Institute); John Rotrosen, MD (Greater New York Node, NYU School of Medicine); Roger D. Weiss, MD (New England Consortium; McLean Hospital Division of Alcohol and Drug Abuse)
Project Summary
This study will 1) test strategies to improve OUD pharmacotherapy treatment retention and to improve outcomes among patients who have been successfully stabilized on OUD medications and want to stop medication; and 2) identify predictors of successful outcome and develop a stage model of relapse risk.
Emergency Department-INitiated bupreNOrphine and VAlidaTIOn Network Trial (ED-INNOVATION) (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Active
Funding Source
NIDA CTN (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Principal Investigator
Gail D’Onofrio, MD, MS (New England Consortium; Yale University School of Medicine)
Project Summary
This study will evaluate implementation of emergency department (ED)-initiated BUP in a large number of sites; compare extended release (XR)-BUP with sublingual (SL) BUP in ED patients with untreated OUD; and develop and validate electronic health record phenotypes of opioid-related illnesses to characterize ED visits, enhance active disease surveillance, and better identify patients eligible for study inclusion.
Exemplar Hospital Initiation Trial to Enhance Treatment Engagement (EXHIT ENTRE) (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Active
Funding Source
NIDA CTN (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Principal Investigator
Gavin Bart, MD, PhD, FACP, FASAM (Northstar Node, Minneapolis Medical Research Foundation, Hennepin County Medical Center); Todd Korthuis, MD, MPH (Western States Node, Oregon Health and Science University)
Project Summary
This study will examine whether 1) in hospitals with addiction medicine consultation services, hospital-initiated extended release buprenorphine (XR-BUP), compared to other OUD medications, results in increased OUD treatment engagement following hospital discharge; and 2) training hospitals without such consultation services on best practices for initiating OUD medication using consultation service hubs improves medication uptake in hospitals and following discharge.
Surmounting Withdrawal to Initiate Fast Treatment with Naltrexone (SWIFT): Improving the Real-World Effectiveness of Injection Naltrexone for Opioid Use Disorder (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Active
Funding Source
NIDA CTN (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Principal Investigators
Adam Bisaga, MD (New York State Psychiatric Institute, Division on Substance Abuse); Edward V. Nunes, Jr., MD (Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons and New York State Psychiatric Institute)
Project Summary
This study will examine if rapid transition to extended release naltrexone (XR-NTX) following detoxification yields a higher proportion of patients successfully receiving the first injection of XR-NTX compared to standard detoxification and naltrexone initiation and will assess facilitators and barriers to implementing rapid XR-NTX initiation.
Culturally Centered MAT for OUD Implementation Facilitation for Primary Care and Addiction Treatment Programs Serving American Indian/Alaska Natives (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Active
Funding Source
NIDA CTN (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Principal Investigators
Kamilla Venner, PhD (University of New Mexico); Aimee Campbell, PhD, MSW (Columbia University Irving Medical Center, New York State Psychiatric Institute)
Project Summary
This study will develop and test a culturally-centered program to support the integration of medications (BUP, XR-naltrexone) to treat OUD among AI/AN in primary care and addiction treatment clinics.
National Medication-Assisted Treatment Survey of Substance Use Disorder Programs Serving American Indian and Alaska Native People (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Active
Funding Source
NIH Heal Initiative
Principal Investigator
Douglas Novins, MD
Project Summary
This study seeks to provide a detailed description of the use of MATs for Opioid Use Disorders in health care systems and substance abuse treatment programs serving AI/AN communities, much-needed insights regarding the dynamics around the decision to implement such practices, and carefully formulated methods for more effective dissemination. Study aims include 1) describe the use of MATs for Opioid Use Disorders in health care systems and substance abuse treatment programs serving AI/AN communities; 2) describe the factors associated with the implementation of MATs for Opioid Use Disorders in these systems and programs; and 3) identify methods for more effective dissemination of MATs to health care systems and substance abuse treatment programs serving AI/AN.
Clinic-Randomized Trial of Clinical Decision Support for Opioid Use Disorders in Medical Settings (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Active
Funding Source
NIDA CTN (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Principal Investigator
Rebecca Rossom, MD, MSCR (HealthPartners Institute for Education & Research); Gavin Bart, MD, PhD, FACP, FASAM (Northstar Node; Minneapolis Medical Research Foundation)
Project Summary
This project will implement an OUD-Clinical Decision Support system in a large multi-site randomized controlled trial to evaluate its impact on practice process measures and patient outcomes; study facilitators and barriers to implementation and determine the costs of implementation and maintenance.
Suicide Prediction and Prevention for People at Risk for Opioid Use Disorder (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Active
Funding Source
NIH Heal Initiative
Principal Investigator
Rebecca Rossom, MD, MSCR; Gavin Bart, MD, PhD, FACP, FASAM
Project Summary
People with opioid use disorder (OUD) are at increased risk of depression and other mental health conditions, and a significant proportion of opioid-related deaths are likely suicides. Nearly 50% of patients who die by suicide make a healthcare visit in the month prior, most often to primary care. Yet systematic screening of patients with OUD for suicide risk is rarely done. Clinical decision support tools within the electronic health record can improve healthcare prevention measures and important clinical outcomes. This primary care-based clinic-randomized trial will integrate a tool in one of the study health systems for suicide risk prediction with a clinical decision support tool for the identification, diagnosis, and treatment of opioid use disorder. By integrating these two tools, the study will identify patients with OUD who have increased risk for suicide, ultimately increasing engagement in both OUD treatment and outpatient mental health care.
Reducing Stigma Toward People with Opioid Use Disorder Among Primary Care Clinicians (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Active
Funding Source
NIH Heal Initiative
Principal Investigator
Stephanie Hooker, PhD, MPH, MS; Rebecca Rossom, MD, MSCR; Gavin Bart, MD, PhD, FACP, FASAM
Project Summary
In one of the study health systems primary care clinicians (PCCs) in clinics randomized to the intervention in COMPUTE 2.0 will be randomized 1:1 to the stigma reduction or comparison training, stratified by clinic and waiver status. Training will be conducted via online learning software. PCCs will be asked to complete a brief training on the clinical decision support tool. PCCs in the stigma reduction intervention will hear patient narratives designed to reduce stigma about patients with opioid use disorder (OUD). PCCs in the comparison training will not get any stigma content but will have training on using the clinical decision support tool. Immediately following the training, the PCCs will complete a survey of stigma beliefs and intentions to get waivered to prescribe buprenorphine and to prescribe buprenorphine. Use of the CDS will be monitored in both groups for 6 months. Secondary outcomes will include measures of PCC behavior, including prescribing behavior and new waivers among previously non-waivered PCCs.
Individual Level Predictive Modeling of Opioid Use Disorder Treatment Outcome (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Active
Funding Source
NIDA CTN (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Principal Investigators
Sean Luo, MD, PhD (Columbia University); Daniel J. Feaster (University of Miami Miller School of Medicine)
Project Summary
This project will develop models to predict individual patient’s risk for relapse (or dropout from treatment) when treated with medications for OUD including methadone, buprenorphine, or extended-release depot naltrexone.
Innovatively Increasing PCP Prescribing of Buprenorphine: Measurement Based Care and Integrated Electronic Solution (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Active
Funding Source
NIDA CTN (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Principal Investigators
Adriane M. dela Cruz, MD, PhD (University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center); Madhukar H. Trivedi, MD (University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center)
Project Summary
This project will develop an office-based buprenorphine treatment module for primary care, including the algorithm for buprenorphine treatment and integration of opioid use disorder (OUD) measures; assess the acceptability of the OUD module; evaluate the impact of the OUD module on screening and identification rates of problem opioid use and successful initiation and maintenance rates of buprenorphine in primary care; assess barriers to implementation of buprenorphine treatment and methods for overcoming these barriers in the network partner clinics; and develop a strategy to refine and more broadly implement opioid problem use and OUD treatment.
DC Research Infrastructure Building & Initiative to Reach, Engage, and Retain in MAT patients with OUD (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Active
Funding Source
NIDA CTN (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Principal Investigator
Richard Schottenfeld, MD (Howard University)
Project Summary
The objectives of this study are to examine factors potentially limiting and/or facilitating MAT utilization in DC clinics (Study 1) and identify and target missed opportunities for outreach and engagement of patients with OUD in overdose prevention and MAT (Study 2) to develop approaches to address these overdose prevention and treatment gaps in the DC OUD treatment system.
Harnessing Digital Health Technologies and Analytics to Understand Clinical Trajectories of Individuals with Opioid Use Disorder in Buprenorphine Treatment (CTN-0084-A2)
Active
Funding Source
NIDA CTN (NIH HEAL)
Project Period
2/15/2019-5/31/2020
Principal Investigator
Lisa A. Marsch, PhD (Northeast Node; Dartmouth College); Cynthia Campbell, PhD (Health Systems Node, Kaiser Permanente Division of Research)
Other Project Staff
David Kotz, PhD (Northeast Node), Saeed Hassanpour, PhD (Northeast Node), Catherine Stanger, PhD (Northeast Node), Varun Mishra, BTech (Northeast Node), Chantal Lambert-Harris, MA (Northeast Node), Andrea Meier, MS, LADC, LCMHC (Northeast Node), Bethany McLeman, BA (Northeast Node), Shea Lemley, PhD (Northeast Node), Emily Hichborn, BS (Northeast Node), Craig Ganoe, MS (Northeast Node), Weiyi Wu, BS (Northeast Node); Ching-Hua Chen, PhD , RN (IBM); Elise Blaese, MS, MBA (IBM); Tian Hao, PhD (IBM); Pei-Yun Sabrina Hsueh, PhD (IBM); Hillol Sarker, PhD (IBM); Harry Stavropolous, MS (IBM), Zhiguo Li (IBM); Monique Does, MPH (Health Systems Node), Heather Jones, MPH (Health Systems Node), Sara Adams, MPH (Health Systems Node); Paul Van Veldhuisen, PhD (DSC); Robert Lindblad, MD (CCC), Julia Collins, MS (CCC); Geetha Subramaniam, MD (CCTN); Kathleen Carroll, PhD (Yale)
Project Summary
Given the ubiquity of access to digital technologies worldwide, digital tools allow for the examination of health behavior and clinical trajectories within-individuals through intensive collection of individual-level, real-time data collected via surveys on mobile device (referred to as Ecological Momentary Assessment [EMA]), wearable sensors (on smartphones and/or smartwatches), and mapping digital footprints. Digitally-derived data allow for the development of dynamic models of health behavior to understand behavior in real-time and in response to changing environmental, social, physiological, and intrapersonal factors.
As applied to persons with opioid use disorder (OUD), digital data that offers ongoing assessment of behavior as individuals live their daily lives can help us better understand the trajectory of clinically important behaviors (e.g., treatment retention; medication adherence over time; opioid use) and identify fluctuating contextual factors that greatly influence such behaviors, (e.g., patterns leading to relapse or treatment dropout).
The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the feasibility of utilizing digital health technology with OUD patients as measured by a 12-week period of continuous assessment using EMA and digital sensing.
The secondary objective of this study is to examine the utility of EMA, digital sensing, and social media data (separately and compared to one another) in predicting OUD treatment retention and buprenorphine medication adherence.
This study is the first in to employ passive mobile sensing, social media data, and active responses to queries on mobile devices using EMA to obtain moment-by-moment quantification of individual-level data that may predict retention and other treatment outcomes in a population of persons in buprenorphine medication treatment with OUD (MOUD). This project brings together experts in OUD, digital health, mobile sensing, digital health data analytics, and EHR research and reflects a novel collaboration between academic institutions, a healthcare system, and an industry partner.
Public Health Relevance
The opioid overdose rate has increased significantly in recent years and is now the leading cause of death in individuals under 50 years old. Better characterization of individuals with OUD is needed to improve the identification of novel targets, treatment retention/outcomes, and advancement of personalized medicine by identifying biological and behavioral markers of severity, treatment response, as well as new conceptualizations of symptom clusters. This study has the potential to inform the advancement of personalized OUD treatment and significantly impact the response to the opioid crisis.
Medication Treatment for Opioid Use Disorder in Expectant Mothers (MOMs): A Pragmatic Randomized Trial Comparing Two Buprenorphine Formulations (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Active
Funding Source
NIDA CTN (NIH Heal Initiative )
Principal Investigator
Theresa Winhusen (Ohio Valley Node, University of Cincinnati)
Project Summary
The growing opioid-use epidemic in the U.S. has been associated with a significant increase in the prevalence of pregnant opioid-dependent women and neonatal abstinence syndrome, which is associated with adverse health effects for the infant and with costly hospitalizations. Maintenance with sublingual (SL) buprenorphine (BUP) is efficacious for opioid use disorder but has disadvantages that may be heightened in pregnant women including the potential for poor adherence, treatment dropout, and negative maternal/fetal effects associated with daily BUP peak-trough cyclees. Extended release (XR) formulations may address some of these disadvantages. The primary objective of CTN-0080 is to evaluate the impact of treating opioid use disorder in pregnant women with BUP-XR, compared to BUP-SL, on maternal-infant outcomes. Testing a conceptual model of the mechanisms by which BUP-XR may improve maternal-infant outcomes, relative to BUP-SL, is a secondary trial objective.
Emergency Department Outcomes for Patients with Opioid Use Disorder (Project ACT) (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Active
Funding Source
NIH HEAL Initiative
Project Period
6/1/2019 – 5/31/2021
Principal Investigator
Ryan McCormack, MD, MS (Greater NY Node; New York University) (Lead Investigator); Kathryn Hawk, MD, MHS (New England Consortium, Yale University) and John Rotrosen, MD (Greater NY Node, New York University) (Co-Lead Investigators); Gail D’Onofrio, MD (New England Consortium, Yale University); Lisa Marsch, PhD (Northeast Node, Dartmouth College) (Co-Investigators)
Other Project Staff
Phoebe Gauthier, MA, MPH (Northeast Node, Dartmouth College) (Lead Project Manager); Kelsey Veilleux, MD (Northeast Node, Dartmouth College) (Local Project Manager); Nico Agosti, BS (Northeast Node, Dartmouth College) (Research Assistant); Brooke Jennings, BS (Northeast Node, Dartmouth College) (Research Assistant)
Project Summary
CTN-0079-A1, an ancillary study to CTN-0079 Emergency Department Connection to Care with Buprenorphine for Opioid Use Disorder (ED-CONNECT), will evaluate the extent of diffusion and the sustainability of the Emergency Department (ED)-initiated buprenorphine (BUP) clinical programs (inclusive of opioid use disorder [OUD] screening, BUP treatment initiation, and referral for treatment) introduced at each of the three clinical sites in the parent CTN-0079 study in furtherance of our original overarching research question: In settings with high need, limited resources, and differing staffing structures for managing OUD, what is the feasibility and impact of introducing a clinical protocol for OUD screening and BUP treatment initiation in the ED with referral for treatment? CTN-0079-A1 is an implementation study that will use mixed methods and triangulate multiple sources of data to evaluate the feasibility, acceptability, sustainability, and impact of the ED-initiated BUP clinical program and implementation facilitation strategy and identify factors influencing diffusion and effectiveness.
Public Health Relevance
It is imperative to maximize linkage to evidence-based care for OUD from less traditional settings such as the ED. It has been more than 3 years since D’Onofrio et al.’s landmark trial demonstrated the feasibility, safety, and efficacy of initiating treatment with BUP in the ED and, despite a highly visible opioid epidemic, few EDs have adopted this life-saving intervention. Currently, EDs are ill-equipped to respond. Developing and refining both an intervention inclusive of OUD screening, BUP treatment initiation, and facilitated referral that is practical for the ED as well as a pragmatic implementation strategy is critically needed. The RE-AIM framework allows the needed multi-level analysis of whether this efficacious treatment can be widely adopted and translated into meaningful outcomes in this real-world complex environment.
Closed CTN Research Studies
Validation of a Community Pharmacy-based Prescription Drug Monitoring Program Risk Screening Tool (PHARMSCREEN) (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Funding
NIH HEAL Initiative
Principal Investigator
Gerald Cochran, MSW, PhD (University of Utah School of Medicine); T. John Winhusen, PhD (University of Cincinnati, Addiction Sciences Division)
Project Summary
The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the criterion and concurrent validity of the Narcotic Score (NS metric) as a clinical measure of opioid misuse and use disorder and establish risk level thresholds within community pharmacies - an optimal - yet underutilized setting for identification and engagement of patients with opioid risk.
Preventing and Identifying Opioid Use Disorder using the Six Building Blocks (6BBs) for Improving Opioid Prescription Management (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Funding
NIH HEAL Initiative
Principal Investigator
Laura-Mae Baldwin, MD, MPH (University of Washington)
Project Summary
This project seeks to develop and test a “train the trainer” curriculum and training experience that will facilitate the spread and use of the Six Building Blocks (6BBs) by adapting the 6BBs framework and toolkit for health systems and other organizations, training personnel to facilitate its implementation, and monitoring results of this implementation.
Integrating Nurse Practitioner Buprenorphine Waiver Training into Graduate Nursing Curriculum (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Funding
NIH HEAL Initiative
Principal Investigator
Kathleen T. Brady, M.D., Ph.D. (Medical University of South Carolina); Karen Hartwell, M.D. (Medical University of South Carolina)
Project Summary
This proposal would address barriers to the NP’s ability to prescribe buprenorphine by incorporating waiver education into NP final semester curriculum. The initial eight hours of training would be provided to students in a face to face classroom setting or via live video streaming. The remaining 16 hours would be completed by the NP students through online modules offered by the AANP. Trained NP students would be eligible for one year of peer to peer mentorship and inclusion in the MUSC Project ECHO tele-mentoring for new providers. Outcomes to be tracked would be the number of NP’s trained who obtain their waiver and the number of individuals treated with MAT by the NP’s trained. Secondary data collected would offer insight into wavier obtainment process and determine need for mentorship for newly waivered providers.
A Foundation to Examine Reasons for Discontinuation for Buprenorphine Care in the Veterans Health Administration (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Funding
NIH Heal Initiative
Principal Investigator
Adam J. Gordon, MD, MPH, FACP, DFASAM, CMRO (University of Utah Health)
Project Summary
This study will include analyses of VA databases to examine patient and organizational characteristics associated with buprenorphine termination during outpatient treatment for opioid use disorder. These analyses are critical for generating data and forming further hypotheses on how to implement targeted approaches to improve retention in treatment.
Inpatient versus Outpatient Treatment Outcomes for People with Opioid Use Disorder (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Funding
NIH Heal Initiative
Principal Investigator
Dan Hartung, PharmD, MPH (Oregon State University/Oregon Health and Science University)
Project Summary
This study will use a multi-state linked administrative database to compare opioid-related outcomes among Medicaid recipients admitted for treatment of opioid use disorder in outpatient and inpatient (or residential) facilities. Patient and organizational factors predicting higher retention in outpatient treatment for OUD will also be examined. These data will be used to generate hypotheses on how to improve retention in treatment.
Selection Bias-Free Estimation of the Impact of Drug-Focused 12-step Mutual Help Groups (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Funding
NIH Heal Initative
Principal Investigator
Keith Humphreys, PhD (Stanford University School of Medicine)
Project Summary
Using a meta-analytic approach retrospectively analyzing data of individuals with drug use disorders, determine the impact of drug-focused 12-step mutual help groups, free of selection bias, in reducing opioid consumption and opioid-related problems. These data will be used to generate hypotheses on how the augmentation of 12-step mutual help groups, added to medication-assisted treatments (MAT), may be used to improve retention in treatment.
Developing a Prescription Opioid Registry across Diverse Health Systems (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Funding
NIH Heal Initiative
Principal Investigator(
Cynthia Campbell, PhD (Kaiser Permanente)
Project Summary
The goal of the proposed study is to expand the prescription opioid registry developed in study CTN 0061, across diverse health systems with harmonized EHR data, and leverage it to answer several key ‘next step’ research questions in response to the opioid crisis. We propose to adapt and expand the registry to 8 other health systems across the nation, initially within the Health System Node (HSN) to maximize efficiency in the short study timeframe, but with potential to be expanded to other nodes in the future.
Using Social Media to Deliver HIV Self-Testing Kits and Link to Online PrEP Services
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Jeffrey D. Klausner, MD, MPH (University of California, Los Angeles)
Project Summary
The risk of HIV infection is magnified for men who have sex with men (MSM), especially minority MSM < 30 years of age and with substance use problems. A promising approach to HIV prevention among this high-risk population is the targeted promotion of HIV self-testing, simplified access to test kits and seamless linkage to pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) medication. This project seeks to compare the relative effectiveness of using social media sites versus informational sites like to promote HIV self-testing and PrEP uptake. MSM between 18-30 years old will receive culturally-relevant advertisements targeting minorities similar to those previously developed. Specifically, the study aims to 1) adapt existing social media-based HIV self-testing and PrEP advertising materials for digital distribution on social media and informational sites and 2) compare the effectiveness of HIV testing and PrEP uptake promotion across social media sites versus online informational platforms.
Implementation Survey of PrEP and Opioid Use Related Services In STI Clinics and MSM-Centered Community Based Organizations (CBOs)
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Susan Tross, PhD (Columbia University); Mary Hatch-Mailette, PhD (University of Washington)
Project Summary
While HIV incidence in the broader population in the US decreased by 18%, between 2008 and 2014, among men who have sex with men (MSM), it increased by 6%. Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is at the cutting edge of HIV prevention worldwide, yet widespread use and promotion of PrEP has not been widely adopted. Also, despite of current evidence on efficacy of Naloxone and MAT interventions to prevent opioid overdose and treat opioid use disorders (OUD), appropriate models to implement in MSM-Centered CBOs are yet to be identified. Information (e.g. access, readiness, capacity, barriers, resource gaps, etc.) is needed to assist in the effort to increase awareness and use of PrEP and adoption of OUD interventions. The study aims to identify health department STI clinics and and/or HIV- centered community-based organizations delivering services to assess: 1) program directors’ and providers’ knowledge/awareness of, interest in, perceived challenges/facilitators to and strategies for, offering PrEP and OUD interventions 2) and MSM’s knowledge/awareness of, interest in, perceived challenges/facilitators to and recommended strategies for, being offered PrEP and OUD interventions.
Emergency Medicine Opioid Data Infrastructure: Key Venue to Address Opioid Morbidity and Mortality
Funding
NIDA CTN
NOTE: This project is supported in a collaboration with the DHHS Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation using resources from the Patient Centered Outcomes Research Trust Fund (Interagency Agreement #ASPE-2018-001).
Principal Investigator
Arjun Krishna Venkatesh, MD, MBA, MHS (Yale School of Medicine); Kathryn Hawk, MD, MHS (Yale School of Medicine); Richard Andrew Taylor, MD, MHS (Yale School of Medicine)
Project Summary
The goal of the project is to build clinical data research infrastructure that will begin to enhance capacity to use electronic health record (EHR) data and patient-reported outcomes measures (PROs) to conduct pain and opioid related research in Emergency Departments (EDs). Existing and potential common data elements (CDE) in emergency medicine settings relevant to opioid misuse and use disorders will be identified. Validity and feasibility testing will be conducted to compare opioid relevant CDEs electronically extracted from participating EDs by the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) Clinical Emergency Data Registry (CEDR) to assess how consistently data elements are obtained in CEDR, the degree to which data elements are captured with a standard format, and whether data elements are easily mapped from various EHR systems to the CEDR. The feasibility and acceptability of electronically collecting patient reported outcome measures via patient portals will be examined.
Emergency Department Connection to Care with Buprenorphine for Opioid Use Disorder (ED-CONNECT)
Funding
NIDA Clinical Trials Network (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Project Period
9/01/2017-5/31/2019
Principal Investigators
Ryan McCormack, MD, MS (NYU Langone Health); John Rotrosen, MD (Co-Lead Investigator); Kathryn Hawk, MD, MHS (Co-Investigator); Lisa Marsch, PhD (Northeast Node, Node PI); Gail D’Onofrio MD (Co-Investigator)
Site
Catholic Medical Center
Site Principal Investigator
Jeremy Arnold, MD
Other Project Staff
Phoebe Gauthier MA, MPH (National Project Manager); Patricia Novo, MPA, MPH (Co-National Project Manager); Sarah Farkas, MA (Lead Regulatory); Dee Blumberg PhD (CCC Project Manager); Dagmar Salazar, MS (CCC Protocol Specialist); Radhika Kondapaka MBBS, RAC (CCC Safety Monitor); Eve Jelstrom, MBA, CRNA (CCC Project Director); Robert Lindblad MD (CCC Medical Monitor); Tracy Dalrymple, MS (DSC Data Manager); Caroline Mulatya PhD (DSC Statistician); Lauren Yesko (DSC Project Director); David Liu, MD (CCTN Protocol Liaison); Kristen Huntley, PhD (CCTN Protocol Liasion); Andrea Meier, MS, LADC, LCMHC (Northeast Node); Bethany McLeman, BA (Northeast Node)
Project Summary
Our central research question is: In settings with high need, limited resources, and differing staffing structures for managing opioid use disorder (OUD), what is the feasibility and impact of introducing a clinical protocol for OUD screening and buprenorphine (BUP, either as sublingual [SL-BUP] or extended-release [XR-BUP]) treatment initiation in the Emergency Department (ED) with referral for treatment?
Aims:
1. To evaluate using mixed methods the feasibility and acceptability of OUD screening, ED-initiated BUP, and referral.
2. Over the course of the study and as XR-BUP is added to hospital formularies, to estimate the percentage and confidence intervals of patients assessed, treated, and engaged in treatment at Day 30.
This will be a three-site study employing a multi-faceted approach to facilitate clinical protocol implementation and to assess feasibility, acceptability, and impact. We will develop, introduce and update site-specific ED clinical protocols and implementation plans for OUD screening, ED-initiated BUP, and referral for treatment. We will employ a participatory action research approach and use mixed methods incorporating data derived from:
1. Medical record and administrative data abstraction,
2. Research assessments involving patients who are eligible for and willing to receive ED-initiated BUP (including both those who do, and do not, receive BUP); these assessments will document the index ED visit and the 30th day after the index ED visit,
3. Qualitative interviews, focus groups, and quantitative assessments involving providers and staff, patients, and other stakeholders.
Public Health Relevance
The opioid epidemic has a large and growing impact on public health, and continues to decimate communities ill equipped to provide substantive, timely intervention. By assembling subject matter experts and involving local stakeholders, we will translate successful elements of efficacious interventions to EDs operating in different contexts. These partnerships provide an opportunity for prompt, meaningful and sustainable dissemination with enhanced support for the intervention while it is being developed and tested in situ. This study is designed to provide the necessary, time-sensitive understanding of how to identify OUD and initiate treatment with BUP in the EDs where this intervention is most needed – which, if successfully done, should save lives, improve outcomes, and reduce costs to society.
Knowledge of and Attitudes About Medication Assisted Treatment Within American Indian Communities
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Sandra Radin, Ph.D. (University of Washington)
Project Summary
This study, in partnership with two American Indian tribes in the Pacific Northwest, addresses critical barriers in the implementation of medication assisted treatment (MAT) for opioid use disorder (OUD). MAT approaches have been shown to substantially improve outcomes for OUD patients, yet provider and patient biases against MAT and organizational barriers to MAT use are widespread, particularly within tribal communities where there is a strong preference toward total abstinence as a goal. The study aim is to identify knowledge and perceptions of MAT approaches and barriers/facilitators for implementation and sustained use. Study results will inform future clinical efforts to tailor MAT for high need, low resource American Indian/Alaska Native (AIAN) populations.
Medical Cannabis Use Among Primary Care Patients: Using Electronic Health Records to Study Large Populations
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Gwen Lapham, PhD, MPH (Group Health Research Institute); Katharine Bradley, MD, MPH (Group Health Reseach Institute)
Project Summary
Medical Cannabis Use among Primary Care Patients: Using Electronic Health Records to Study Large Populations. The objective of the proposed rapid response research, in a state with legal medical and nonmedical cannabis use, is to better understand medical use of cannabis in a single large health system that routinely asks primary care patients about the frequency of past-year cannabis use. Specific Aims are to: 1) Develop and validate a natural language processing (NLP) algorithm to identify electronic health record (EHR)-documented medical cannabis use, 2) Describe patients with EHR-documented medical cannabis use and compare them to patients with other types of cannabis use, and 3) Describe patient experience of medical cannabis use among patients with EHR-documentation of its use.
Clinical Decision Support for Opioid Use Disorders in Medical Settings: Pilot Usability Testing in an EMR (COMPUTE)
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigators
Gavin Bart, MD, PhD (Northstar Node, Minneapolis Medical Research Foundation Hennepin County Medical Center); Rebecca Rossom, MD, MS (Northstar Node, HealthPartners Institute for Education & Research)
Project Summary
The primary objective of this 2 year pilot study is to program opioid use disorder (OUD) clinical decision support (CDS) for use in an electronic medical record (EMR). The secondary objectives of this pilot study are to: 1) evaluate feasibility, usability, and acceptability with buprenorphine prescribing primary care providers during a 6-month pilot phase and 2) assess changes in readiness to identify and manage OUD, provider satisfaction with OUD CDS, and usage.
Physician-Pharmacist Collaboration in the Management of Patients with Opioid Use Disorder (Pharm-OUD-Care)
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Li-Tzy Wu, ScD, RN (Duke Clinical Research Institute)
Project Summary
A collaborative care model for people with opioid use disorder that involves buprenorphine-waivered physicians and community pharmacists appears to be feasible to operate in the United States and have high acceptability to patients. A high proportion (93.4%, 71/76) of eligible participants enrolled into the study. There were high rates of treatment retention (88.7%) and adherence (95.3%) at the end of the study. The proportion of opioid-positive urine drug screens (UDSs) among complete cases (i.e. those with all six UDSs collected during 6 months) at month 6 was (4.9%, 3/61). Intervention fidelity was excellent. Pharmacists used PDMP at 96.8% of visits. There were no opioid-related safety events. Over 90% of patients endorsed that they were "very satisfied with their experience and the quality of treatment offered," that "treatment transfer from physician's office to the pharmacy was not difficult at all," and that "holding buprenorphine visits at the same place the medication is dispensed was very or extremely useful/convenient." Similarly, positive ratings of satisfaction were found among physicians/pharmacists.
Primary Care Opioid Use Disorder (PROUD) Treatment Trial
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Katharine Bradley, MD, MPH (Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute)
Project Summary
Though treatment for opioid use disorders with medications (buprenorphine or naltrexone provided in primary care, or methadone from an Opioid Treatment Program) has been shown to be effective, the majority of patients with OUDs are never treated with medications, and most primary care practices do not offer buprenorphine treatment. This trial seeks to compare a collaborative care model to usual primary care for management of OUDs in primary care across multiple health care systems.
Primary Care Opioid Use Disorder (PROUD) Treatment Trial Economic Analysis Study (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Funding
NIH Heal Initiative
Principal Investigator
Katharine Bradley, MD, MPH (Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute); Sean Murphy, PhD (Weill Cornell Medicine)
Project Summary
Effective treatment for opioid use disorder (OUD) has been shown to improve patient outcomes and reduce health care costs; however, evidence of this effect in primary care settings is severely limited. The health economic findings from this study will supplement the parent PROUD trial's results regarding clinical effectiveness and implementation outcomes and provide critical contextual information for health systems and other healthcare stakeholders. The study wille valuate the economic viability of the PROUD collaborative care model for OUD; that is, from the perspective of the health care sector, to what extent do the downstream cost savings associatd with improved patient outcomes offset the additional costs of the PROUD intervention. The specific aims are to: 1) estimate the start-up and ongoing management costs of the PROUD intervention; 2) assess costs associated with health care utilization for patients who receive primary care treatment in PROUD and usual care clinics and have been identified with recognized OUD prior to clinic randomization; 3) estimate the economic value of the PROUD intervention, measured as net monetary benefit (NMB, incremental benefit-incremental cost), from the health care sector perspective.
Towards Detecting Cocaine Use Using Smartwatches in the NIDA Clinical Trials Network
Funding
NIDA CTN
Project Period
6/1/16-5/31/19
Principal Investigators
Lisa A. Marsch, PhD (Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth); Santosh Kumar, PhD (University of Memphis)
Site
Johns Hopkins University
Site Principal Investigator
August Holtyn, PhD
Other Project Staff
Dr. Emre Ertin (sensor expert who designed AutoSense and EasySense sensors at Ohio State); Dr. Kenzie Preston (Chief of the Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics Research Branch at the NIDA Intramural Research Center); Dr. August Holtyn (Research Associate at the Center for Learning and Health at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine); Dr. Udi Ghitza (CCTN); Dr. Dee Blumberg (CCC); Jennifer McCormack (DSC); Shahin Samiei (University of Memphis); Andrea Meier (Dartmouth); Bethany McLeman (Dartmouth); Samantha Auty (Dartmouth);Carmen Rosa (CCTN); Syed Hossain (University of Memphis); Massoud Vahabzadeh (Chief of the Biomedical Informatics Section at the NIDA Intramural Research Center); Jia-Ling Lin (Biomedical Informatics Section at the NIDA Intramural Research Center); Mustafa Mezghanni (Biomedical Informatics Section at the NIDA Intramural Research Center)
Project Summary
The goal of this project is to investigate methods to detect cocaine use from heart rate data captured by smartwatches, so this approach can be deployed widely in the NIDA Clinical Trials Network (CTN). This method will enable us to automatically detect cocaine use and the precise timing of such use. And, this approach can nicely complement self-report methods that suffer from temporal inaccuracy in reporting cocaine use in the field setting. Detection of cocaine use via smartwatches will build upon, and extend, our recently developed methods to identify cocaine use from interbeat interval heart rate data obtained from electrocardiogram (ECG) sensors and physical activity from accelerometer data.
The specific aims of the project are:
1.Develop a smartwatch device that can reliably detect interbeat interval and can last the entire day on a single charge of battery with continuous sensor data collection.
2.Conduct a user study to determine the feasibility of using smartwatches to collect reliable interbeat interval and physical activity data in the natural field setting. This study will provide the data necessary to determine under what conditions high quality data can be obtained from smartwatches, identify common failure scenarios, and understand wearability/usage patterns.
3.Adapt the computational model for detecting cocaine use from interbeat interval, so it can be applied to the interbeat and physical activity data obtained from smartwatches. We will also assess the degree of specificity of the model relative to other stimulant use.
Public Health Relevance
Illicit drug use results in significant consequences including morbidity, mortality and health care costs. Detection of cocaine use relies heavily on inaccurate self-report or intrusive urine screens. Detection by smart watches offer many benefits to researchers, providers and consumers.
Patient and System-Level Factors Associated with HEDIS AOD-IET Measure Performance Across Health Systems
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigators
Constance Weisner, DrPH, MSW (Health Systems Node, University of California, San Francisco; Kaiser Permanente)
Project Summary
This study will examine how performance on the AOD initiation and engagement measures vary by characteristics of the eligible population; how performance on the AOD initiation and engagement measures vary by system characteristics; and structural differences and policies within each region and for specific facilities which may explain variations in performance on the HEDIS AOD Initiation and Engagement measures.
Electronic Health Records Data Elements Research (EHR-DARE)
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Li-Tzy Wu, ScD, RN (Mid Southern Node, Duke Clinical Research Institute)
Project Summary
The immediate purpose of this work is to identify electronic health record (EHR) data available today and in the near future at healthcare facilities participating in the NIDA Clinical Trials Network (CTN). The overarching goal is to address a critical barrier to progress in substance use disorder (SUD) research and support planning on the CTN for research infrastructure to leverage EHR data for research informing SUD screening, intervention, treatment, and referral efforts.
Interpretation and Implementation of Title 42 CFR Part 2 for Confidentiality of Patient Drug and Alcohol Use Records: NIDA CTN Stakeholder Snapshot
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Gavin Bart, MD, PhD, FACP, FASAM (Northstar Node, Minneapolis Medical Research Foundation, Hennepin County Medical Center)
Project Summary
The research project will explore institutional variability in the interpretation and implementation of 42 CFR Part 2 regulations related to health systems data privacy practices, policies and information technology architecture. Specific aims include describing the range of interpretations of 42 CFR Part 2 across health systems participating in the Clinical Trials Network and describing the range of current information technology implementation practices for 42 CFR Part 2 regulations (e.g., EHR operationalization; workflow strategies; workarounds).
Opioid Use Disorder in the Emergency Department
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Gail D'Onofrio, M.D., M.S. (Yale University School of Medicine)
Project Summary
The study uses a Hybrid Type 3 Effectiveness-Implementation framework and a modified stepped wedge design. The study will be conducted at four EDs with a high prevalence of patients with untreated opioid use disorder (OUD). The four sites will receive the same sequence of evaluations and interventions: the baseline evaluation period after the standard dissemination practice, the IF phase, and continuation of facilitation into the IF evaluation period. The timing of initiation of the study activities at each site will be randomly offset by ~ 3 month increments to accommodate logistical constraints of simultaneous implementation at all sites. The study populations will include (1) ED providers and staff involved in the treatment of patients with OUD; (2) Community opioid treatment provider and program staff involved in providing care for patients with OUD referred from the ED; and (3) ED patients with moderate to severe OUD.
Accelerated Development of Additive Pharmacotherapy Treatment (ADAPT-2) for Methamphetamine Use Disorder
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Madhukar Trivedi, MD (University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center)
Project Summary
This study, building on the lessons learned from the ADAPT Study; will further investigate the effectiveness and safety of a combination pharmacotherapy (XR-NTX; as Vivitrol® plus once-daily bupropion extended-release tablets) for methamphetamine use disorder.
Comparing Treatments for HIV-Positive Opioid Users in an Integrated Care Effectiveness Study (CHOICES); Scale-Up
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Todd Korthuis, MD, MPH (Oregon Health & Science University)
Project Summary
This study will build on lessons learned from the CHOICES pilot study (CTN-0055) and to advance understanding of XR-NTX adoption in HIV primary care settings. HIV primary care clinics are being selected to participate in an open-label trial of office-based XR-NTX in HIV-infected participants with untreated opioid use disorder or alcohol use disorders.
Opioid Use Disorders in Primary Care Settings: Linking EHRs with PDMP and National Death Index Data Systems
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Yih-Ing Hser, Ph.D. (Western States Node, Integrated Substance Abuse Programs, UCLA)
Project Summary
Opioid addiction is associated with excess mortality, morbidities, and other adverse health and social conditions. Most knowledge of opioid addiction, however, is based on studies of individuals treated in publicly-funded specialty programs. At present there is limited information about patterns of opioid use, related infectious disease (HIV, hepatitis C), and other co-morbidity, and health care utilization among individuals treated in primary care settings. The availability of electronic health records (EHRs) provides the opportunity to examine the health status and service use among large and diverse primary care samples. This study will analyze electronic health records of individuals treated for opioid addiction in a primary care network and will link EHR data with two other existing data systems (i.e., Prescription Drug Monitoring Program or PDMP, National Death Index) in order to generate actionable knowledge and identify ways to improve care.
Evaluation of Drug Screening Implementation in Primary Care
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Katharine Bradley, MD, MPH (Health Systems Node, Group Health Research Institute)
Project Summary
Recent trials of screening and brief intervention for drug use have no demonstrated benefit compared to screening alone. However, the value of screening for drug use, compared to no screening, has not been evaluated. Screening for drug use may identify patients with drug use disorders who might need more intensive treatments than brief intervention. In states where marijuana use is now legal for recreation, as well as medical uses, clinicians want to be aware of and assess risks of marijuana use. Further, little is known about the predictive validity of screens for marijuana and/or drug use/misuse for subsequent adverse health outcomes. To that end, this study seeks to evaluate implementation of drug screening in primary care to: 1) describe rates of drug and marijuana screening, and positive screens, as well as barriers and facilitators to population-based screening; 2) assess changes in rates of assessment and identification; and 3) assess whether drug and marijuana use is associated with increased subsequent urgent care, ED, and hospitalization.
Linkage to Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) Care among HIV/HCV Co-infected Substance Users
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Lisa R. Metsch, PhD (Florida Node Alliance, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine)
Project Summary
Using the existing CTN-0049 cohort as a research platform, the proposed RCT will assess the effectiveness of an efficacious linkage to care intervention for HIV/HCV co-infected substance users. Linkage to care will be operationalized as receipt of clinical evaluation/treatment for HCV infection. Secondary objectives will be to assess: 1) relative success at each step in the cascade, 2) engagement in substance use treatment and HIV care, and 3) HIV viral suppression as well as 4) to examine other long-run outcomes of the CTN-0049 cohort.
Determination of Cause of Death Among HIV-Infected Substance Users Enrolled in Project Hope: A 4 Year Follow- Up
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Lisa R. Metsch, PhD (Florida Node Alliance, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine)
Project Summary
This study seeks to determine: 1) if the primary and secondary causes of death among CTN-0049/64 participants were due to AIDS, liver disease, substance use, or non-AIDS comorbidities, 2) if there are differences in primary and secnodary causes of death among those with and without hepatitis C. Furthermore, the study aims to determine risk factors for all-cause mortality based on baseline CTN-0049/64 data and follow-up health services data. An HIV-specific mortality index will be developed to help clinicians and public health officials determine who is at the highest risk for mortality in three years.
Gender Differences in the Interrelationships Between Sexual Abuse, Risky Sexual Behavior, and Anxiety/Depression in Treatment Efficacy and Drug Use Over Time Among Individuals with Substance Use Disorders
A Phased-Implementation Feasibility and Proof-of-Concept Study to Assess Incorporating the NIDA CTN Common Data Elements into the Electronic Health Record in Large Primary Care Settings (CDE-EHR-PC)
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Jennifer McNeely, MD, MS (NYU Grossman School of Medicine)
Project Summary
This is a phased feasibility and proof-of-concept study seeking to incorporate addiction-specific screening and assessment CDEs into a widely used EHR, explore the logistics and time required to do this, and assess impacts on the frequency of identification, diagnosis and referral to treatment in large healthcare organizations.
Implementing the Tobacco, Alcohol, Prescription Medication, and Other Substances (TAPS) Tool in Rural Federally-Qualified Health Centers
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Jennifer McNeely, MD, MS (NYU Grossman School of Medicine)
Project Summary
This ancillary study is related to CTN-0062-Ot, "A Phased-Implementation Feasibility and Proof-of-Concept Study to Assess Incorporating the NIDA CTN Common Data Elements into the Electronic Health Record in Large Primary Care Settings (CDE-EHR-PC)."
This study aims to: 1) program the TAPS Tool and decision support into the health system's electronic health record (EHR), 2) study the process of implementation of screening and referral using EHR-driven CDEs and clinical decision support in three federally qualified health center primary care clinics, and 3) evaluate the impact of implementation on patient, provider, and systems level outcomes.
Kaiser Virtual Data Warehouse - Prescription Opioid Users
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Cynthia Campbell, PhD (Health Systems Node, Kaiser Permanente)
Project Summary
Analyzing data stored in Kaiser Permanente Northern California’s Virtual Data Warehouse, this study will assess adult new and long-term prescription opioid users in a large integrated health care delivery system to identify treatment patterns, risk factors, and associated outcomes over ti
Validating 3 Substance Use Screening Tools for Adolescents
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Sharon Levy, MD, MPH (Harvard Medical School)
Project Summary
This study seeks to test the psychometric properties of three instruments, BSTAD, S2BI, and TAPS, against a criterion standard of DSM-5 substance use disorder diagnoses in a population of adolescents presenting for routine primary care.
Tobacco, Alcohol, Prescription Medications, and Substance Use/Misuse Brief Screen/Assessment Tool (TAPS Tool)
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigators
Robert P. Schwartz, MD (Mid Atlantic Node, Friends Research Institute, Inc.); Li-Tzy Wu, ScD, RN (Mid Southern Node, Duke Clinical Research Institute); Jennifer McNeely, MD (Greater New York Node, New York University)
Project Summary
This study seeks the validation of a clinically useful brief screening and assessment instrument to identify patients with problematic substance use or a substance use disorder to facilitate brief interventions and referrals to appropriate treatment. Specifically, this study's aims are to 1) develop a two-stage brief screening and assessment instrument to detect unhealthy use of tobacco, alcohol, prescription, and illicit drugs among primary care patients; 2) examine the validity of this 2-state instrument by comparing it to reference standard measures for substance use, problematic use, and substance use disorders; and 3) determine the feasibility of a self-administered 2-stage tool and an interviewer-administered 2-stage tool in US general medical set
Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment in Primary Care (SBIRT-PC)
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Li-Tzy Wu, ScD (Mid Southern Node, Duke Clinical Research Institute)
Project Summary
This study leverages the existing research resources of a funded parent project “Duke University Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Innovation Award Southeastern Diabetes initiative (PI: Robert M. Califf, MD).” It explores the feasibility of implementing Screening for substance use, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment services (SBIRT) in diabetic patients in primary care, and examines the effects of substance use status on diabetes health care outcomes. It also assesses the feasibility of the CTN’s clinical decision support algorithm for SBIRT in the primary care setting. This project uses a longitudinal, community-based design nested within the parent study in a diabetes care setting. Adults aged 18 or older with type 2 diabetes and who meet the inclusion and exclusion criteria for the parent study at the Durham County, North Carolina sites will be screened and assessed for substance use at baseline and 6, 12, 18 and 24-month follow-up periods. The study will examine changes in substance use trajectories and explore the impact of substance use status on subsequent diabetes care and health outcomes.
Testing and Linkage to HIV Care in China: a Cluster Randomized Trial
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Walter Ling, MD (Integrated Substance Abuse Programs, UCLA) Zunyou Wu, MD, PhD (China Center for Diseases Control and Prevention)
Project Summary
The high proportions of patients lost at each step along the continuum of HIV care result in suboptimal benefits of life-saving antiretroviral therapy (ART) in developing countries. This project examined the effects of a hospital-based structural intervention (One4All) designed to ensure that HIV-positive individuals receive a confirmed HIV diagnosis and determination of treatment eligibility. The primary aim was to determine whether implementation of the One4All intervention increases the proportion of HIV-positive, treatment-eligible patients who are identified and linked to ART and who achieve VL suppression, thereby reducing mortality.
Comparing Treatments for HIV-Positive Opioid Users in an Integrated Care Effectiveness Study (CHOICES)
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Todd Korthuis, MD, MPH (Western States Node, Oregon Health and Science University)
Project Summary
HIV-infected patients receiving office-based treatment are more likely to achieve HIV viral suppression, decreasing the overall community viral load and associated HIV incidence. Injection drug users are least likely to engage in HIV care and achieve HIV viral suppression compared to other HIV risk groups. Substance abuse treatment can increase engagement in HIV care, but HIV providers have limited options for long-acting office-based addiction treatments. This study will compare extended-release naltrexone to treatment as usual for opioid dependence in approximately 400 HIV-infected patients.
Accelerated Development of Additive Pharmacotherapy Treatment (ADAPT)
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Walter Ling, MD ( Integrated Substance Abuse Programs, UCLA); Larissa Mooney, MD (Integrated Substance Abuse Programs, UCLA)
Project Summary
The aim of this 2-stage, 3-site study is to investigate the safety and effectiveness of depot naltrexone (XR-NTX; as Vivitrol®) plus extended-release bupropion (BRP; as Wellbutrin XL®) for methamphetamine use disorder. Stage 1 will include 20 individuals with severe stimulant use disorder (methamphetamine type). Following a maximum 30-day screening period to establish eligibility, participants will receive a monthly injection of depot naltrexone plus once-daily bupropion extended-release tablets for 8 weeks. Participants will be asked to attend clinic twice weekly for observed BRP dosing, collection of urine samples, assessments, and medical management. Following the 8-week active medication phase, participants will complete a follow-up phase, including a medication taper and follow-up visit during Week 9. If Stage 1 data document success in at least 3 "responder” study participants, Stage 2 will follow utilizing the same protocol as in Stage 1, to enroll an additional group of 29 participants. Using the same criteria of "responder” success, if the combined stages document success in at least 9 of 49 study participants, the combination medication will be considered to have shown sufficient potential to advance to a large-scale placebo-controlled trial.
Achieving Cannabis Cessation—Evaluating N-Acetylcystein Treatment (ACCENT)
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Kevin Gray, MD (Southern Consortium; Medical University of South Carolina)
Project Summary
This is a 12-week, intent-to-treat, randomized controlled trial to evaluate the impact of N-Acetylcysteine (NAC) 1200 mg versus matched placebo (PBO) twice daily, added to compliance enhancement (CE) and contingency management (CM) interventions, on cannabis use among treatment-seeking adults (ages 18-50) with cannabis use disorders. Approximately 300 participants will be randomized to receive NAC 1200 mg or matched placebo twice daily for 12 weeks. All participants will concurrently receive CE and CM interventions. CM procedures (weekly during treatment) will include escalating schedules of cash reinforcement with resets, targeting (a) retention/adherence, and (b) cannabis abstinence (confirmed by negative qualitative urine cannabinoid testing). The primary analysis will evaluate the impact of NAC versus PBO on cannabis use during the 12-week treatment intervention with the primary outcome measure being the odds of negative urine cannabinoid tests submitted during the 12-week treatment, compared between the two treatment groups.
A Randomized Controlled Evaluation of Buspirone for Relapse-Prevention in Adults with Cocaine Dependence (BRAC)
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Theresa Winhusen, Phd (Ohio Valley Node, University of Cincinnati/CinARC)
Project Summary
The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of buspirone, relative to placebo, in preventing relapse in cocaine-dependent adults in inpatient/residential treatment who are planning to enter outpatient treatment upon inpatient/residential discharge. Secondary objectives include evaluating the impact of buspirone, relative to placebo, on other drug-abuse outcomes and on factors that may mediate buspirone's efficacy as a relapse-prevention treatment.
Extended-Release Naltrexone vs. Buprenorphine for Opioid Treatment (X:BOT)
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
John Rotrosen, MD (Greater New York Node; New York University School of Medicine)
Project Summary
This study will assess the comparative effectiveness of extended release injectable naltrexone (XR-NTX, Vivitrol®) versus buprenorphine-naloxone (BUP-NX, Suboxone®) as pharmacotherapeutic aids to recovery amongst treatment-seeking participants who have completed detoxification and achieved short term abstinence. The primary objective is to compare the effectiveness of XR-NTX versus BUP-NX in promoting the joint outcome of sustained retention in treatment and abstinence after an index admission for opioid dependence. A rescue protocol will enable the study to address additional questions regarding the sequencing of treatments.
Extended-Release Naltrexone vs. Buprenorphine for Opioid Treatment (X:BOT) Genetics Study
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Mary Jeanne Kreek, MD (Greater New York Node, Rockefeller University)
Project Summary
This study will examine functional variants in three genes (OPRM1, OPRK1, and PDYN) known to affect the dynamic response to opioid receptor ligands. These variants will be evaluated for their contribution to treatment retention, abstinence, and depression in the CTN-0051 trial. Their effects will be compared between the two alternative treatments: extended-release injectable naltrexone (XR-NTX) and buprenorphine-naloxone (BUP-NX). Pharmacogenomics application of study results obtained may allow individual tailoring of these medications. In addition, knowledge pertaining to other aspects of pathophysiology of the receptors systems targeted by XR-NTX or BUP-NX may be gained.
Treatment-As-Usual Opioid Use Outcomes Following Discharge from Detoxification and Short-Term Residential Programs Affiliated with CTN-0051
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
John Rotrosen, MD (Greater New York Node; New York University School of Medicine)
Project Summary
This ancillary study is related to CTN-0051, "Extended-Release Naltrexone vs. Buprenorphine for Opioid Treatment (X:BOT)."
This is an observational study intended to describe opioid use amongst opioid use disorder patients following their discharge into the community from inpatient detoxification and/or short-term residential treatment programs affiliated with CTN-0051. The primary outcome is to estimate treatment-as-usual rates of opioid use clinical outcomes following discharge to the community in this convenience sample.
Long Term Follow-Up of START Patients
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Yih-Ing Hser, PhD (Integrated Substance Abuse Programs, UCLA); Walter Ling, MD (Integrated Substance Abuse Programs, UCLA)
Project Summary
No studies to date have examined the longer-term effects of Suboxone versus methadone after treatment termination. This project will assess the longer-term outcomes of the large sample of opioid-dependent patients randomly assigned, in the START Study (CTN-0027), to receive Suboxone or methadone for a (planned) six to eight months of treatment. The study team will conduct personal interviews of START participants, approximately 3 to 5 years post-admission, supplemented by (electronic) medical and other records as available. The results will have important implications for optimizing maintenance treatment for opioid dependence. The specific aims of the project are as follows: (1) To determine longer-term outcomes of Suboxone versus methadone treatment received in the START Study; (2) To investigate patient and treatment factors associated with post-START treatment access, utilization, and outcomes; (3) To explore other correlates of long-term outcomes among START participants.
Project HOPE: Hospital Visit as Opportunity for Prevention and Engagement for HIV-Infected Drug Users
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Lisa R. Metsch, PhD (Florida Node Alliance, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine)
Project Summary
Project HOPE will evaluate the effectiveness of a brief intervention delivered to HIV-infected drug users recruited from the hospital setting in achieving viral suppression.
The trial comprises: 1) an active patient navigator component: a strengths-based case management approach that includes motivation, physical escort to treatment, and face-to-face booster sessions; and 2) a passive incentives/contingency management component to further motivate and reinforce completion of target behaviors. The primary goal of the study is HIV viral suppression. In addition, the study will also determine linkage and retention in HIV primary care, linkage and retention in drug abuse treatment, and reduction in numbers of hospitalizations
Examining the Patient Navigation Process for HIV and Substance Abuse Treatment
Funding
NIDA CTN
Project Summary
This ancillary study is related to CTN-0049, "Project HOPE: Hospital Visit as Opportunity for Prevention and Engagement for HIV-Infected Drug Users."
This study seeks to gain an in-depth understanding of the patient navigation process as it is practiced in the CTN-0049 (Project HOPE) study with HIV positive substance abusers. Specific aims are to: 1) determine how the navigation process differs for the HIV care and substance abuse treatment systems; and 2) assess patient navigators' perceptions of contingency management.
Utilization of the Electronic Medical Record to Assess and Predict 30-Day Readmission Risk Among HIV-Infected Inpatients Enrolled in CTN-0049
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Ank Nijhawan, MD (Texas Node, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center)
Project Summary
This ancillary study is related to CTN-0049, "Project HOPE: Hospital Visit as Opportunity for Prevention and Engagement for HIV-Infected Drug Users."
This study seeks to validate the Electronic Medical Record (EMR)-derived prediction model for hospital readmissions within CTN-0049 by comparing predicted 30-day readmission risk with actual 30-day readmission rates among the three different study arms and to refine the EMR-derived prediction model for hospital readmissions based on additional variables collected in the CTN-0049 trial.
Cocaine Use Reduction with Buprenorphine (CURB)
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigators
Walter Ling, MD (Integrated Substance Abuse Programs, UCLA); Andrew Saxon, MD (Pacific Northwest Node, Veteran Affairs Puget Sound Health Care System); Larissa Mooney, MD (Integrated Substance Abuse Programs, UCLA)
Project Summary
The aim of this study is to investigate the safety and effectiveness of buprenorphine in the presence of naltrexone for the treatment of cocaine dependence. Eleven CTP study sites will enroll 300 cocaine-dependent participants who also meet criteria for either past-year opioid dependence or past-year opioid abuse, or past-year opioid use with a history of opioid dependence during the lifetime.
Pharmacogenetics of Buprenorphine/Naltrexone for Cocaine Dependence in the CURB Study
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigators
David A. Nielsen, PhD (Texas Node, Baylor College of Medicine, Texas); Thomas R. Kosten, MD (Texas Node, BAylor College of Medicine, Texas)
Project Summary
This ancillary study is related to CTN-0048, "Cocaine Use Reduction with Buprenorphine (CURB)."
This study aims to test whether genetic markers in the mu, kappa, and nociceptin/orphanin FQ, OPRL1 receptors are associated with the efficacy of buprenorphine and naltrexone (BUP/NTX) for individuals with cocaine use disorder. Investigators hypothesize that patients with the functional mu polymorphism of OPRM1, rs1799971, A118G, which is non-synonymous Asn to Asp substitution, will have a greater reduction in cocaine use than those without this polymorphism. This hypothesis is based on the reduced rate of relapse during naltrexone treatment in alcoholic patients with this polymorphism compared to those without this polymorphism. The study will also explore several polymorphisms in the kappa and nociceptin/orphanin FQ neurotransmitter systems for their potential effects on treatment response to BUP/NTX based on protective associations of several of these polymorphisms with cocaine and other drug abuse.
Screening Motivational Assessment and Referral to Treatment in Emergency Departments (SMART-ED): Evaluation of Screening, Brief Intervention, Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) and Booster Session for Drug Use Patients Presenting for Treatment in the Emergency Department
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigators
Michael Bogenschutz, MD (Southwest Node; Center on Alcoholism, Substance Abuse, and Addictions (CASAA), University of New Mexico); Dennis M. Donovan, PhD (Pacific Northwest Node; Alcohol and Drug Abuse Institute, University of Washington)
Project Summary
The present study builds on the knowledge base in developing and implementing screening and brief interventions for harmful and hazardous alcohol use delivered in emergency departments and trauma centers, by transferring and evaluating these procedures when applied to drug use. The study will contrast substance use and substance-related outcomes among patients endorsing problematic substance use during an emergency department (ED) visit who are randomly assigned to one of three treatment conditions: 1) minimal screening only (MSO); 2) screening, assessment, and referral to treatment (if indicated) (SAR); and 3) screening, assessment, and referral plus a brief intervention (BI) with two telephone follow-up booster sessions (BI-B). The primary outcome is days of use of the patient-defined primary problem drug at 3 months following enrollment. Secondary outcomes include change from baseline in days of use of the primary substance, the number days abstinent from all drugs, days of heavy drinking, total quantity of drug use, objective change in drug use based on analysis of hair samples, self-reported consequences of drug and alcohol use, percent entering treatment among those classified as having probable dependence, and ED and other health care utilization.
Site Influences on Treatment Effects – Screening, Motivational Assessment, Referral, and Treatment in Emergency Departments (SMART-ED)
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Dennis McCarty, PhD (Oregon Health and Science University)
Project Summary
This ancillary study is related to CTN-0047, "Screening, Motivational Assessment, Referral and Treatment in Emergency Departments (SMART-ED): Evaluation of Screening, Brief Intervention, Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) and Booster Session for Drug Use Patients Presenting for Treatment in the Emergency Department."
Site variations in study outcomes are apparent in clinical trials conducted within the National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network (CTN). Systematic and standardized collection of organizational and workforce variables may help elucidate site variations and increase the CTN’s understanding of patient outcomes in protocols. The SMART-ED trial (CTN-0047) will be used to assess the influence of organizational and workforce characteristics on trial operations (e.g., rates of participant recruitment and follow-up) and patient outcomes (e.g., reductions in drug use). This study will build on the analysis of organizational and workforce data in the Baseline Protocol (CTN-0008) and the collection of pre-implementation site data for STAGE-12 (CTN-0031-A-3). The study’s specific aim is the assessment of associations between site organizational and practitioner variables and site differences in clinical trial outcomes.
Smoking Cessation and Stimulant Treatment (S-CAST): Evaluation of the Impact of Concurrent Outpatient Smoking Cessation and Stimulant Treatment on Stimulant Dependence
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Theresa Winhusen, Phd (Ohio Valley Node, University of Cincinnati/CinARC)
Project Summary
The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the impact of substance abuse treatment as usual plus smoking cessation treatment (TAU+SCT), relative to substance abuse treatment as usual (TAU), on drug abuse outcomes. This is a 10-week, intent-to-treat, 2-group randomized controlled trial with follow-up visits at 3 and 6 months post-smoking quit date. Eligible participants will be randomized to the TAU+SCT or TAU arm. Participants randomized to the TAU+SCT arm will have a target quit smoking day at the end of study week 3. Participants randomized to the TAU+SCT arm will receive individual smoking-cessation counseling consisting of approximately one ten-minute counseling session per week during study weeks 1 through 10. In addition, all TAU+SCT participants will receive extended-release (XL) bupropion (300 mg/day) and, during the post-quit treatment phase, nicotine inhaler (6-16 cartridges per day ad libitum). Finally, all TAU+SCT participants will receive contingency management in which drawings for prizes are given for smoking abstinence as assessed by carbon monoxide (CO) levels during the post-quit phase of the trial (i.e., weeks 4-10). The study will evaluate whether concurrent smoking cessation treatment improves, worsens, or has no effect on drug abuse outcomes in smokers who are in outpatient substance abuse treatment for cocaine or methamphetamine dependence. Secondary objectives include evaluating: 1) the efficacy of TAU+SCT, relative to TAU, in improving smoking outcomes; 2) the safety of TAU+SCT relative to TAU.
Site Influences on Treatment Effects - Smoking Cessation and Stimulant Treatment (S-CAST): Evaluation of the Impact of Concurrent Outpatient Smoking Cessation and Stimulant Treatment on Stimulant-Dependent Outcome
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Dennis McCarty, PhD (Oregon Health and Science University)
Project Summary
This ancillary study is related to CTN-0046, "Smoking Cessation and Stimulant Treatment (S-CAST): Evaluation of the Impact of Concurrent Outpatient Smoking Cessation and Stimulant Treatment on Stimulant Dependence".
Site variations in study outcomes are apparent in clinical trials conducted within the National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network (CTN). Systematic and standardized collection of organizational and workforce variables may help elucidate site variations and increase the CTN’s understanding of patient outcomes in protocols. The Smoking-Cessation and Stimulant Treatment (CTN-0046) will be used to assess the influence of organizational and workforce characteristics on trial operations (e.g., rates of participant recruitment and follow-up) and patient outcomes (e.g., reductions in drug use). This study will build on the analysis of organizational and workforce data in the Baseline Protocol (CTN-0008) and the collection of pre-implementation site data for STAGE-12 (CTN-0031-A-3). The study’s specific aim is the assessment of associations between site organizational and practitioner variables and site differences in clinical trial outcomes.
Rates of HIV Testing and Barriers to Testing in African Americans Receiving Substance Abuse Treatment
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Tiffany L. Kyle, PhD (Florida Node Alliance; The Center for Drug Free Living, Inc.)
Project Summary
This is an observational study seeking to: (1) Compare the proportion of African American and non-African Americans receiving treatment at substance abuse treatment clinics that have been tested for HIV within the past 12 months; (2) Observe relationships between rates of African Americans who have not been tested and a) the types of testing offered at substance abuse treatment clinics and b) the types of outreach strategies used to engage persons in HIV testing; and (3) assess African American clients’ self-reported barriers to accessing HIV testing, in relation to other ethnicities.
Web-Delivery of Evidence-Based, Psychosocial Treatment for Substance Use Disorders
Site Influences on Treatment Effects – Web-delivery of Evidence-Based, Psychosocial Treatment for Substance Use Disorders
Funding
NIDA CTN
Project Summary
Site variations in study outcomes are apparent in clinical trials conducted within the National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network (CTN). Systematic and standardized collection of organizational and workforce variables may help elucidate site variations and increase the CTN’s understanding of patient outcomes in protocols. The Web-Delivery of Evidence-Based, Psychosocial Treatment for Substance Use Disorders study (CTN-0044) will be used to assess the influence of organizational and workforce characteristics on trial operations (e.g., rates of participant recruitment and follow-up) and patient outcomes (e.g., reductions in drug use). This study will build on the analysis of organizational and workforce data in the Baseline Protocol (CTN-0008) and the collection of pre-implementation site data for STAGE-12 (CTN-0031-A-3). The study’s specific aim is the assessment of associations between site organizational and practitioner variables and site differences in clinical trial outcomes.
Acceptability of a Web-delivered, Evidence-based, Psychosocial Intervention among Individuals with Substance Use Disorders who Identify as American Indian/Alaska Native
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Edward Nunes, MD (Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons)
Project Summary
This ancillary study is related to CTN-0044, "Web Delivery of Evidence-Based, Psychosocial Treatment for Substance Use Disorders."
This study aims to examine the acceptability of a web-delivered Community Reinforcement Approach intervention (Therapeutic Education System - TES) among clients who identify as American Indian/Alaska Native in two non-reservation based treatment programs: City/County Alcohol & Drug Programs (CCADP) in Rapid City, SD (Ohio Valley Node) and Native American Rehabilitation Association of the Northwest (NARA) in Portland, OR (Western States Node). The study will recruit approximately 40 participants over 4 months and collect both quantitative and qualitative acceptability data. Qualitative data obtained from post treatment, semi-structured individual interviews will be used to interpret quantitative findings, raise additional intervention-related factors important to participants, and inform possible TES adaptation for this population.
Web-Tx Organizational and Practitioner Follow-Up
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigators
Aimee Campbell, PhD, MSW (Greater New York Node, New York State Psychiatric Institute, Columbia University); Traci Rieckmann, PhD (Western States Node; Oregon Health & Science University)
Project Summary
This ancillary study is related to CTN-0044, "Web Delivery of Evidence-Based, Psychosocial Treatment for Substance Use Disorders."
Little is known about how computer-assisted interventions function within clinical treatment settings, provider attitudes towards this technology, and attitude changes of those providers over time. This ancillary study takes advantage of an opportunity to collect data over time from practitioners who have been exposed to an innovative computer-based therapy, the Therapeutic Education System (TES), through the addition of two follow-up surveys. Findings from this study will provide key insights into practitioner attitudes toward technological innovation, and identify important factors related to adoption and implementation, such as organizational characteristics, climate, and culture. Specific aims: 1) Assess change in practitioner attitudes, social norms, and intentions related to computer use, internet use, and web-based interventions from baseline (pre-protocol implementation) to follow-up 1 (post-study treatment completion) and follow-up 2 (post-study outcomes sharing). It is hypothesized that practitioner attitudes, social norms, and intentions will become more positive over time. 2) Assess change in practitioner attitudes, social norms, and intentions related to computer use, internet use, and web-based interventions as a function of number of clients participating in TES and providers' perceived usefulness of TES for the client. It is hypothesized that practitioner attitudes, social norms, and intentions will be positively associated with the number of TES clients assigned and perceived usefulness. 3) Explore the association between practitioner attitudes, social norms, intentions, and organizational variables (readiness, climate, organizational characteristics) at follow-up 1 and follow-up 2. 4) Describe changes in organizational factors (readiness, climate, organizational characteristics) which may serve as facilitators or barriers for adoption or implementation of the computer-assisted intervention TES.
Substance Abuse Treatment Outcomes in Racial/Ethnic Minority Populations
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Carmen Masson, PhD (Western States Node; University of California, San Francisco)
Project Summary
This study addresses the following questions: (1) What is the proportion and number of racial/ethnic minority participants in each CTN clinical trial, and what is their representation across multiple CTN trials? (2) Do racial/ethnic minority participants in CTN clinical trials experience different attrition than non-minority participants? (3) Do racial/ethnic minority participants in CTN clinical trials experience different outcomes than non-minority participants?
Efficacy of Motivational Enhancement Therapy for African Americans
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Kathy Burlew, PhD (Ohio Valley Node; University of Cincinnati)
Project Summary
This secondary analysis addresses three questions specifically within the African American sample of CTN-0004 participants (CTN-0004 examined the use of Motivational Enhancement Treatment (MET) in subjects seeking treatment for substance abuse): (1) Does the MET group differ from the comparison group (counseling-as-usual - CAU) on retention and substance abuse? (2) Do any patient (age, gender, drug type) or clinical setting (availability of ancillary services) characteristics increase the efficacy of motivational interventions over other interventions? (3) Are the effects of MET more evident immediately for certain subgroups of African Americans but later for other subgroups of African
Relationships Between Demographic Characteristics of Patients and Therapists, Measures of Therapeutic Process and Therapeutic Alliance, and Outcomes
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Alyssa Forcehimes, PhD (Southwest Node, Center on Alcoholism, Substance Abuse, and Addictions (CASAA), University of New Mexico)
Project Summary
Establishing a positive relationship between the therapist and patient is recognized as a crucial element for successful psychotherapy regardless of treatment modality. The aim of this study was to test whether participants’ and therapists’ perceptions of therapeutic alliance were associated with total days of substance use across participants in three MET/MI trials in the CTN and whether the relationship between substance use and therapeutic alliance would differ when patients’ race or gender matched their therapists’ race or gender.
Pattern of Alcohol Use and Alcohol-Related Diagnoses among Drug Abusing/Dependent Participants
Funding
NIDA CTN
Principal Investigator
Dennis M. Donovan, PhD (Pacific Northwest Node; Alcohol and Drug Abuse Institute, University of Washington)
Project Summary
Alcohol use, abuse, and dependence are common among individuals who are dependent on other drugs such as cocaine, other stimulants such as methamphetamine, and opiates. This study examines the pattern of alcohol use, alcohol-related diagnoses, and severity of other problems among a large sample of drug abusing/dependent participants from 10 CTN studies (see Related Studies, below) enrolled in community-based drug treatment programs across the country.
Expanding Clinical Research Training on Implementing the Evidence-based Hub and Spoke Model of Medication-Assisted Treatment for Opioid Use Disorder (NIH HEAL Initiative)
Funding
NIH HEAL Initiative
Principal Investigator
Lisa A. Marsch, Ph.D. (Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth College)
Project Summary
As part of an ongoing teleECHO learning collaborative (LC), this study will expand clinical research training in evidence-based quality improvement methods that were central to delivering and sustaining science-based medication-assisted treatment for opioid use disorder (MOUD) within the Vermont Hub-and-Spoke Model (HSM). Participating primary care practices will be trained in the 1) use of a study-developed toolkit of research and evaluation quality improvement methods intended to expand provider knowledge and performance in the delivery of evidence-based MOUD, 2) systematic tracking of standardized outcome metrics, and 3) sharing of standardized data with other LC members so that practices can use this empirical information to refine their care model over time. The study will measure changes in providers’ knowledge about best practices for MOUD, their comfort in caring for OUD patients with MOUD, and their performance on all the standardized outcome metrics.
For information on CTN-001 through CTN-0039-S visit the CTN Dissemination Library.