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About
Drinking multiple alcoholic drinks on a single occasion (binge drinking), has many negative health risks but interventions to address this behavior remain limited. This double-blind, placebo-controlled randomized clinical trial will test whether kudzu, an herbal supplement, can reduce heavy alcohol use and alcohol-associated sexual behaviors among sexually-active, binge-drinking individuals at high risk for HIV infection.
Full description
This study, entitled "The Harness Study" is a double-blind, placebo-controlled, two-arm trial in which 120 binge drinkers with AUD will be randomly assigned to receive 12 weeks of kudzu or placebo, to be taken on an as-needed basis (see Figure 2) with 1- and 3-month post-treatment follow-up visits. This efficacy study will enroll sexually active, binge drinkers with AUD because they are the most likely population to benefit from this intervention by limiting harms associated with heavy alcohol use and decreasing alcohol-related sexual risk behaviors. A study clinician will perform the Structured Clinical Interview for the DSM-V (SCID) to screen for AUD and determine eligibility. Upon enrollment, 120 participants will be randomized 1:1 to kudzu extract (2 grams) or placebo for targeted administration. Participants will be seen weekly for behavioral surveys, urinalyses, study drug dispensing, and alcohol use counseling. Safety laboratory assessment, vital signs, and the audio computer assisted survey instrument (ACASI) will be completed monthly. Efficacy, tolerability, and acceptability (Specific Aims 1-4) will be assessed upon trial completion as measured by number of binge drinking occasions and numbers of drinks on drinking days via timeline follow-back at weekly visits; number of EtG-positive urine samples; sexual risk behavior data through monthly surveys via ACASI; frequency of adverse events; and cumulative medication adherence data at week 12. Durability of intervention effects will be evaluated at 1- and 3-month post-treatment visits.
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Inclusion criteria
(*Note: Participants newly diagnosed with HIV at screening are eligible for the study but we will postpone their enrollment until they are virally suppressed with HIV viral load < 50 copies/mm .)
Exclusion criteria
(*Note: Eligible participants who have a partner currently in the study will be enrolled and randomized after their partner has completed their in-treatment follow-up, to reduce the concerns of contamination between treatment conditions. Additionally, we will exclude individuals with impaired renal function as a general precaution. Pharmacokinetic data on kudzu is limited. Puerarin is present in the urine of rats for 4-72 hours after oral administration, thus there is renal elimination of the active compound, as well as it's metabolite, equol. For this reason, we prefer to be cautious by limiting enrollment to those with reasonable renal function. We selected eGFR < 50mL/min as that is the level at which most products with renal clearance begin to demonstrate risks of increased toxicity.)
Primary purpose
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120 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Central trial contact
Janet M Ikeda, MA; Glenn-Milo Santos, PhD, MPH
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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