Status and phase
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About
Background:
People with opioid-use disorder (OUD) might benefit from having more treatment drugs to choose from. A new drug, TRV734, could be used like methadone to treat OUD. It might not have as many side effects.
Objective:
To test if TRV734 relieves withdrawal symptoms and has fewer side effects than oxycodone in people with OUD.
Eligibility:
People ages 18-75 who have been receiving daily treatment with methadone for opioid use disorder for at least 3 months
Design:
Participants will be screened under Protocol 415. They will be screened with:
Medical, social, and psychiatric history
Physical exam
Electrocardiogram (ECG). For this, sticky pads will be placed on the participant s chest to monitor their heartbeat.
Blood and urine tests
Participants will stay in a residential unit for 13-21 days.
Most days, participants will receive their regular daily dose of methadone.
On 4 or 5 occasions, 3-4 days apart, participants will skip two doses of methadone in a row. About 4 hours after they skip the second dose, they will have an IV catheter inserted with a needle so that blood samples can be taken. They will take capsules of either oxycodone, a placebo, or the study drug. They will have an ECG. They will complete questionnaires. Their blood pressure, pupil size, and alertness will be tested. They will then take their usual dose of methadone.
Participants will give daily urine and breath samples.
Full description
Background. Opioid-agonist medications (methadone and buprenorphine) are the most effective treatments available for opioid addiction. However, they are not effective in all cases, and with the vast number of people requiring treatment in the current crisis, even a modest increase in the percentage of people who respond to treatment would represent a substantial benefit in public health. Recent advances in neuropsychopharmacology have led to the discovery of a new class of opioid agonists that are functionally selective. That is, they are biased towards specific post-receptor pathways and in theory can produce therapeutic opioid effects (analgesia, withdrawal relief) while minimizing side effects (sedation, respiratory depression) that can lead people to discontinue treatment with methadone or buprenorphine.
Objective. Our goal is to assess the efficacy and tolerability of a biased opioid agonist for suppressing or reversing opioid withdrawal.
Participant population. Adults who are physically dependent on opioids and already receiving chronic daily methadone treatment (up to 64 enrolled; up to 30 completers, plus at least 3 to complete an initial unpowered dose-finding pilot). Target enrollment will include 40% women and 60% minorities (mostly African-American), reflecting the demographics of the relevant local population.
Experimental design. A double-blind within-subject randomized placebo-controlled experiment will be used to test whether a biased opioid agonist suppresses withdrawal when given about 52 hr after discontinuing methadone. TRV734 (capsule form), a biased opioid agonist with good oral bioavailability, will be compared to placebo and to oxycodone (positive control) in matching capsules. A signal of efficacy and safety in the proposed laboratory study will be our cue to embark on a larger clinical trial.
Methods. Participants in an unpowered dose-finding five-session pilot phase (up to 30 consecutive days, i.e., 29 consecutive nights) will receive placebo, oxycodone, and a range of doses of TRV734, starting on the high side of the analgesic dose range. The highest dose that relieves withdrawal symptoms with no appreciable adverse effects will be used as the higher of two doses for the participants in the main study. These participants will stay at the inpatient unit for up to 30 consecutive days to help ensure that participants use no additional opioids 52-76-hr prior to each test session.
Participants in the main phase will stay at the inpatient unit for up to 21 consecutive days (original timeline, likely to increase after the pilot is completed) to help ensure that participants use no additional opioids 52-76-hr prior to each test session. To help demonstrate that TRV734 s effects are dose-related, we will also select a lower dose with withdrawal-relief efficacy intermediate between placebo and the higher dose. For participants in the main study, there will be four experimental sessions: one each with placebo, oxycodone, and the two doses of TRV734. Safety and research measures will be collected before (baseline) and for 4 hours after administration of study drugs. The participant s usual methadone dose will be administered after each session.
Outcome measures: The primary outcome will be suppression of withdrawal symptoms, to be assessed by the SOWS (Subjective Opioid Withdrawal Scale). Secondary outcomes will include safety, specificity of effects (e.g., absence of psychomotor slowing), tolerability, and suppression of objective signs of withdrawal. Instruments used for these assessments will include the COWS (Clinical Opioid Withdrawal Scale), scales for opioid effects, psychomotor assessments, and differential dropout across sessions. We hypothesize that the higher dose of TRV734 will be superior to placebo in therapeutic effects and have lower adverse effects (including effects on alertness and psychomotor performance) compared to oxycodone.
Enrollment
Sex
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Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Participants will be eligible for inclusion in the study if they meet the following criteria:
Age between 18 and 75.
Currently receiving daily treatment with methadone (dose range 60-150 mg/day) for opioiduse disorder (OUD) for at least 3 months prior to first study drug dose per participant s Opioid Treatment Program (OTP) and self-report. However, we will allow flexibility in the dose range during that 3-month period (such as an occasional missed methadone dose or a temporarily decreased methadone dose) if, in the judgement of the MAI, the candidate is stable on methadone overall and has not lost tolerance to methadone.
Willing to miss two to three mornings' doses of methadone (without supplementing with other opioids), and reporting having done so in the past without severe withdrawal symptoms on the first day-with severe defined here as any of the following: repeated vomiting, repeated bouts of diarrhea, or any other symptoms so painful or uncomfortable that the participant would not want to experience them several times in this study.
Willing to provide blood samples through an intravenous catheter to either upper extremity.
For women of childbearing potential: must have a negative serum or urine pregnancy test within 72 hours prior to the first study drug dose (active or placebo) AND agree to use an adequate method of contraception1 to avoid pregnancy for a period of 3 months beginning from 30 days prior to first dose of study drug. Women of childbearing potential include any female who has experienced menarche and who has not undergone successful surgical sterilization (hysterectomy, bilateral tubal ligation, or bilateral oophorectomy) or is not postmenopausal.
Standard NIH Clinical Center criteria for menopause:
Women over age 55 who have not had a period for 1 year will be considered menopausal and do not need a pregnancy test, FSH test, or contraception.
Women between 50 55, who have not had a period for 1 year, should have an FSH test. If their FSH level is more than 20, they will be considered menopausal and do not need pregnancy testing or contraception. If their FSH level is less than 20, they will need pregnancy testing and contraception as required by the protocol.
Women between 45 50 who have not had a period for 1 year will need both an FSH test and a pregnancy test. If they are not pregnant and their FSH level is more than 20, they will be considered menopausal, and will not require contraception or additional pregnancy testing. If their FSH test is less than 20, they will need pregnancy testing and contraception as required by the protocol.
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
Applicants will not be eligible if they meet any of the following criteria:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
5 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Central trial contact
David H Epstein, Ph.D.; NIDA IRP Screening Team
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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