Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
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.
Full description
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.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Patients:
Study-Physician Participants.
Clinician Participants.
Exclusion criteria
Patients:
Study-Physician Participants.
Clinician Participants.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
225 participants in 5 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Paul Glimcher
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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