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Project MIMIC (Maximizing Implementation of Motivational Incentives in Clinics)

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Brown University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Opioid-use Disorder

Treatments

Behavioral: Addiction Technology Transfer Center (ATTC) Training Strategy
Behavioral: Enhanced Addiction Technology Transfer Center (E-ATTC) Training Strategy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT03931174
R01DA046941 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
#1811002260

Details and patient eligibility

About

There is an urgent need for effective treatments for patients with opioid use disorder (OUD). This study will train opioid treatment programs in an evidence-based behavioral treatment called contingency management (CM). Contingency management (i.e., motivational incentives for achieving pre-defined treatment goals) is one of the only behavioral interventions shown to improve patient treatment outcomes when combined with FDA-approved pharmacotherapy. Unfortunately, however, uptake of CM in opioid treatment programs remains low. In response to the urgent need for evidence-based behavioral OUD treatments, the investigators propose a large-scale type 3 hybrid trial comparing two comprehensive strategies to promote CM implementation as an adjunct to pharmacotherapy within opioid treatment programs. The control condition is the staff training strategy used by the New England Addiction Technology Transfer Center, which consists of didactic workshop, performance feedback, and staff coaching. The experimental condition is the ATTC strategy enhanced by external leadership coaching (using a model called Implementation Sustainment Facilitation; ISF) and provider incentives (using a model called Pay for Performance; P4P).

A cluster randomized design trial will be conducted with 30 opioid treatment programs across New England. Centers will be randomized to one of the two implementation conditions (ATTC vs. enhanced-ATTC) over the 5 year project. At each opioid treatment program, data will be collected at multiple intervals from CM treatment providers, organizational leaders, and newly admitted patients. Additionally, patient charts will be randomly selected for review to examine sustainment. Data collection will include electronic medical record review, ratings of audio recordings by staff blind to condition, well-validated measures, and provider weekly report of patient encounter data. Specific Aims of the study are to experimentally compare the effect of the two conditions on implementation outcomes (Primary Aim) and on patient outcomes (Secondary Aim). An Exploratory Aim is to test whether two organization-level variables (i.e., implementation climate, leadership engagement) partially mediate the relationship between implementation condition and the key study outcomes.

Full description

Overdoses and deaths due to opioid use disorders (OUDs) have been declared a public health emergency in the United States, bringing to light an urgent need for highly effective OUD treatments. There are currently five FDA-approved medication formulations, which relative to placebo have demonstrated effectiveness in helping patients attain abstinence from opioids. Nonetheless, patients' opioid abstinence rates are sub-optimal: even when treated with the newest extended-release formulations only about 40% of patients maintain abstinence during the first 6-months of treatment. Contingency management (CM; i.e., motivational incentives for achieving pre-defined treatment goals) is one of the only behavioral interventions shown to improve patient abstinence from opioids when combined with FDA-approved pharmacotherapy. Unfortunately, however, uptake of CM in opioid treatment programs remains low.

The primary purpose of this study is to experimentally evaluate two different comprehensive training models to train opioid treatment programs in CM. A Type 3 Hybrid Trial will be conducted collecting data on both implementation and patient outcomes. Using a cluster randomized design, 30 opioid treatment programs across New England will be randomized to one of two comprehensive training conditions over a 5 year period. The control condition is the staff training strategy used by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA)-funded network of Addiction Technology Transfer Centers (ATTC; i.e., didactic workshop + performance feedback + staff coaching). The experimental condition is the ATTC strategy enhanced by external leadership coaching (using a model called Implementation Sustainment Facilitation [ISF], i.e., leadership coaching focused on sustainment planning) and provider incentives (using a model called Pay for Performance [P4P]; i.e., monetary bonuses for achieving pre-defined implementation goals), hereafter referred to as E-ATTC. Elements of the E-ATTC condition were informed by our team's prior NIH-funded work evaluating organization-level implementation strategies. At each OUD treatment center, data will be collected at multiple intervals from up to 2-5 CM treatment providers (n=60-150 providers), 1-2 organizational leaders (n=30-60 leaders), and 25 newly admitted patients (n=750 patients). Additionally, 25 patient charts per center (n=750 charts) will be randomly selected for review to examine sustainment. Data collection will include electronic medical record review, ratings of audio recordings by staff blind to condition, well-validated measures, and biological verification of abstinence.

The Primary Aim of the study is to experimentally compare the effect of the two training strategies on implementation outcomes. Focal implementation outcomes include: CM Exposure (provider-level measure of the proportion of providers delivering the target number of CM sessions to at least one patient during 9-month Implementation phase), CM Competence (provider-level measure of CM quality during month Implementation phase), and CM Sustainment (organization-level measure of the proportion of programs continuing to deliver CM sessions during 6-month Sustainment phase).

The Secondary Aim of the study is to experimentally compare the effect of the two training strategies on patient outcomes. Focal patient outcomes include abstinence from opioids and opioid-related problems.

An Exploratory Aim is to test whether two provider-level variables (i.e., implementation climate, leadership engagement) partially mediate the relationship between implementation condition and the key study outcomes.

Pursuit of these aims is significant given the potential to improve the treatment of OUDs in community settings, which is one of the greatest public health challenges currently facing our nation. Major strengths of the approach include the study's experimental design (cluster randomized trial), novel implementation strategy based on mixed-methods pilot data by the investigative team, large sample of organizations (N = 30), partnership with a SAMHSA-funded national training center, and rigorously measured implementation and patient outcomes.

Enrollment

780 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion criteria for community-based opioid treatment programs (n = 30):

  • prescribes FDA-approved medication to treat adult patients with OUDs
  • enrolls 5+ new patients per month
  • has at least 2 staff who provide psychosocial support to OUD patients

Exclusion criteria:

• None

Inclusion criteria for CM Providers (n = 60-150, range of 2-5 per center):

  • has been involved in providing psychosocial support to OUD patients on pharmacotherapy
  • has an active caseload
  • is willing to commit to 14 months of CM training and support

Exclusion criteria:

• None

Inclusion Criteria for CM Leaders (n = 30-60, range of 1-2 per center):

  • is responsible for supervising frontline CM Staff
  • is willing to commit to 14 months of external leadership coaching

Exclusion criteria:

• None

Inclusion criteria for patients (n = 750):

  • adult patients
  • newly admitted to the opioid treatment center within the past 30 days
  • prescribed any FDA-approved OUD medication

Exclusion criteria:

• issues that could interfere with the ability to complete a brief intake interview including acute intoxication, acute psychosis, acute mania, or cognitive impairment (prohibiting comprehension of the consent process), as reported by opioid treatment program staff or observed by research staff

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

780 participants in 2 patient groups

Addiction Technology Transfer Center (ATTC) Training
Active Comparator group
Description:
Half of the opioid treatment centers will receive the ATTC training strategy.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Addiction Technology Transfer Center (ATTC) Training Strategy
Enhanced ATTC (E-ATTC) Training Strategy
Experimental group
Description:
Half of the opioid treatment centers will receive the E-ATTC training strategy.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Enhanced Addiction Technology Transfer Center (E-ATTC) Training Strategy

Trial documents
2

Trial contacts and locations

29

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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