Status and phase
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About
This study is examining the use of Tezampanel (TZP) for treatment of Opioid Withdrawal Syndrome (OWS) in participants with Opioid Use Disorder (OUD). Participants will receive TZP or placebo (PBO) daily on Days 2 - 7 during a 7-day inpatient stay at the research center to determine safety, pharmacokinetic (PK) assessment, and efficacy of TZP for OWS.
Full description
This study is a phase I, single-center, single-blind, dose escalation study conducted in four cohorts to characterize the safety, tolerability, PK profile and efficacy of TZP for mitigation of OWS in treatment-seeking participants. Participants must be established in an outpatient treatment program and may be taking either long-acting opioid maintenance medications, methadone/buprenorphine, or short-acting opioids (not yet converted to a long-acting maintenance medication).
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Male, female or non-binary, age 18 to 65 years of age at Screening.
Diagnosis of Opioid Use Disorder (OUD)
Positive Urine Drug Screen (UDS) for opioid(s) at the Screening and Baseline Visits.
Recent active/chronic use of short-acting illicit and/or prescribed opioids and/or long-acting Opioid Use Disorder (OUD) maintenance treatments buprenorphine or methadone at the Screening and Baseline Visits.
Already engaged and fully assessed in a longitudinal-outpatient treatment program that provides opioid addiction treatment encompassing the full spectrum of opioid maintenance and abstinence (injectable Vivitrol®) treatments, in which the host clinic is prepared and equipped to continue with:
Post-menopausal/sterile or agree to use chemical or barrier methods of birth control from time of informed consent through 30 days post last treatment.
Stable concomitant medications.
Stable concomitant medications for depression, post-traumatic stress disorder, psychotic disorders, and bipolar spectrum disorders if one of the following: SSRI, SNRI, bupropion, MAOI, trazodone, Tricyclic, typical and atypical antipsychotics, lithium, antihistamine, alpha-adrenergic agent, nicotine replacement.
Stable concomitant medications: propranolol, prazosin, and clonidine if used for psychiatric reasons, and not to control hypertension at the Baseline Visit and unchanged on Study Day 1.
Provide informed consent.
Understand and follow Lifestyle Considerations per protocol.
Exclusion criteria
Clinically at risk or unstable due to:
Abnormal safety laboratory results.
ALT or AST > 3xs upper limit of normal at Baseline or Study Day 1.
Undiagnosed hypertension defined as:
Temperature > 38.1°C at the Baseline Visit. Temperature > 38.9°C at the Study Day 1.
Medications that stimulate the dopamine system pre- or post-synaptically, including L-Dopa, lisdexamfetamine, modafinil, gabapentin, phenobarbital, etc.) at the Screening or Baseline Visits or Study Day 1.
Medications for addiction, ADHD, insomnia, or bipolar spectrum disorders involving dopamine system stimulants, benzodiazepines, barbiturates, or mood stabilizers active via GABA or glutamate receptor system (e.g. valproic acid, lamotrigine, carbamazepine, acamprosate, disulfiram) at the Screening or Baseline Visits or Study Day 1.
Use of naltrexone or acamprosate (active at opioid or glutamatergic receptors) at the Screening or Baseline Visits or Study Day 1.
Significant, active infection (e.g., positive for syphilis, tuberculosis, COVID-19, HBV) at the Baseline Visit.
Symptomatic HIV or HCV (detectable viral load) at the Baseline Visit.
Pregnancy or breastfeeding at the Screening or Baseline Visits or Study Day 1.
Poor venous access at the Baseline Visit or Study Day 1.
Participation in a research study involving another investigational drug in the last 3 months at the Screening Visit.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
40 participants in 4 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Christopher Toombs
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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