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Treatments for opioid addiction exist, but effectiveness is compromised when subjects use illicit opiates during treatment. Reuse rates during treatment can be high, and reducing illicit opiate use during treatment has thus recently become a major NIDA policy goal. The 5-minute battery indicates the numerical probability that a patient will reuse illicit opiates within the next 7-10 days.
The primary goal in this mid-scale clinical trial is to test the hypothesis that clinicians who use the output of the mobile system to adjust buprenorphine and methadone dosing achieve lower opiate reuse rates than physicians who provide care-as-usual. The secondary goal is to examine the usability and desirability of this solution for clinicians with an eye to usability and large-scale deployment. The third and final goal is to measure the cost-effectiveness of this solution from multiple perspectives. If successful it will be possible to employ an algorithmic and measurement-based approach to OUD treatment with methadone and buprenorphine which reduces reuse rates and relapse rates amongst OUD patients.
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| Label | Type | Description | Intervention Names |
|---|---|---|---|
| Treatment-as-Usual | No Intervention | Participants will receive the same treatment as if they had not joined the study | |
| Smartphone with dose changes after using | Experimental | Participants will have an app installed on their phone and have to complete a brief questionnaire and some days play a 2-4 minute game. |
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| Smartphone with dose changes before using | Experimental | Participants will have an app installed on their phone and have to complete a brief questionnaire and some days to play a 2-4 minute game. |
|
| Focus group with Study Physicans | Experimental | Study physicians asked to participate in a focus group session or 1:1 interviews if unable to attend the focus group during year one of the study and once annually towards the end of years 2, 3, 4, and 5 of the study |
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| Focus group with Clinicians | Experimental | Clinicians asked to participate in a 1:1 interview and a separate focus group at roughly the same time. Prior to the first structured interview with our study team, you will participate in a 1-hour training and familiarization session with the SOAR system using synthetic or training data. |
| Name | Type | Description | Arm Group Labels | Other Names |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Smartphone app | Other | SOAR (Smartphones for Opioid Addiction Recovery) system (battery + platform) as a tool for adjusting MOUD dosages to reduce treatment dropout. |
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| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Proportion of patients will reduce illicit substance reuse rates with PREDICTIVE-DOSING relative to treatment as usual (TAU). | This is measured by collecting one salivary drug test every two weeks in addition to any drug testing they may complete as part of their clinical treatment. Once saliva samples are obtained they will be aggregated and sent weekly for analysis by mass spectrometry. The primary outcome from these data will be the number of toxicology tests positive for illicit opioids. These data are count in nature and truncated at both 0 and 12. | 1 month visit, 3 months visit, 6 months visit |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| To assess the impact of POSTUSE-DOSING on reuse rates relative to TAU | This will be measured through self reports through the smartphone and assessed by randomly scheduled, remote drug screens with saliva samples. | 1 month visit, 3 months visit, 6 months visit |
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Inclusion Criteria:
Patients:
Study-Physician Participants.
Clinician Participants.
Exclusion Criteria:
Patients:
Study-Physician Participants.
Clinician Participants.
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| Name | Role | Phone | Extension | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Paul Glimcher | Contact | 212-263-8167 | Paul.glimcher@nyulangone.org |
| Name | Affiliation | Role |
|---|---|---|
| Stephen Ross, MD | NYU Langone Health | Principal Investigator |
| Facility | Status | City | State | ZIP | Country | Contacts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rutgers University | Not yet recruiting | Piscataway | New Jersey | 08854 | United States |
Individual participant data that underlie the results reported in this article, after deidentification (text, tables, figures, and appendices).
Beginning 9 months and ending 36 months following article publication or as required by a condition of awards and agreements supporting the research.
Researchers who provide a methodologically sound proposal. Upon reasonable request. Requests should be directed to Paul.glimcher@nyulangone.org To gain access, data requestors will need to sign a data access agreement.
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| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D009293 | Opioid-Related Disorders |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D000079524 | Narcotic-Related Disorders |
| D019966 | Substance-Related Disorders |
| D064419 | Chemically-Induced Disorders |
| D001523 | Mental Disorders |
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| NYU Langone | Recruiting | New York | New York | 10016 | United States |
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