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About
Pain is very common in persons with a history of addiction, but few studies have examined the best treatment of pain in this population. This is a study to determine the pain relief provided by intravenous hydromorphone (Dilaudid) or buprenorphine given to persons maintained on stable doses of methadone or buprenorphine. Experimental sessions will require overnight stays on a residential research unit. In these sessions, persons will be exposed to standard experimental pain techniques at baseline and then rate the relief (if any) provided by the study medication when exposed to the same techniques. Persons will be asked to participate in 2 or 3 sessions, each separated by at least 7 days.
Full description
This research is being done to learn how to better treat pain in people maintained on opioid medications, like methadone and buprenorphine (Suboxone ®, Subutex ®). People who take opioid medications for long periods of time are known to experience pain differently; and, regular amounts of medications may not be enough to treat the pain of these individuals. Additionally, many people with a history of addiction are afraid of taking opioid pain relievers, like morphine or hydromorphone (Dilaudid ®), for fear of relapse.
This study will help guide the medical community on better pain treatment for people prescribed buprenorphine or methadone. Investigators also want to determine the risk for relapse in people who receive opioid pain relievers for the treatment of acute pain.
Healthy people aged 18-55 who are maintained on buprenorphine or methadone for the treatment of opioid dependence may take part in this study. Participants must be free of illicit drug use and be on a stable dose of methadone or buprenorphine. Initial screening will occur over the phone and then select participants will be scheduled for an in-person screening at the BPRU.
If a participant meets all criteria and agrees to participate, he or she will be enrolled into the study. Enrolled participants will have 2 or 3 sessions involving overnight stays on the Behavioral Pharmacology Research Unit (BPRU) residential unit.
Sessions will each last for about 40 hours and involve identical procedures. That means participants will stay 2 nights on the BPRU residential unit for each session, and these sessions will be at least a week a part. Most people will complete all sessions within 1 month.
During sessions participants will experience the following:
Day 1 - Admission to the BPRU residential unit
Day 2 - Experimental pain testing
On each session day, a nurse will insert an IV catheter on the arm or hand not involved with pain testing.
Investigational drug or placebo will be given in random order. During each pain testing session, participants will receive 4 doses of the same investigational drug or placebo. If participants are on methadone, they will not receive buprenorphine injections as these could cause opioid withdrawal symptoms. Participants will not be told which drug or placebo they are getting and the research staff will not know the assignment either.
Participants will have 7 rounds of experimental pain testing, each lasting about 45 minutes and consisting of the same pain procedures. A trained technician will show participants each of the pain testing procedures and practice with them until participants learn what is involved and how to respond. Participants will be asked to complete 4 different types of standard pain tests during each session. Participants may stop these procedures at any point by telling the technician that they wish to stop.
At times, participants will experience more than one type of pain at the same time.
Day 3 - Discharge
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132 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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