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Behavioral Naltrexone Therapy: A Novel Treatment for Heroin Dependence

Study Behavioral Naltrexone Therapy: A Novel Treatment for Heroin Dependence

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT00332228
Enrollment
125
Registered
2006-06-01
Start date
2002-06-30
Completion date
2007-12-31
Last updated
2012-10-26

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Opiate Dependence

Keywords

opiate dependence, heroin dependence, naltrexone, cognitive behavioral therapy

Brief summary

The overall goal of this research project is to test the efficacy of a newly developed therapy, Behavioral Naltrexone Therapy (BNT), to enhance the success of naltrexone maintenance and long-term abstinence for individuals with heroin dependence. This study includes free detox and outpatient treatment for opioid dependence that includes medication and a behavioral intervention.

Detailed description

The goal of this Stage II project is to test the efficacy of a new combination of behavioral therapy with oral naltrexone maintenance for the treatment of heroin addiction, and to test a new long-acting depot parenteral formulation of naltrexone in initiating treatment. 1. Outpatient treatment with Behavioral Naltrexone Therapy will yield a lower rate of relapse to illicit opiates compared to naltrexone plus compliance enhancement therapy. Hypotheses: 2. Injections of depot naltrexone will reduce early attrition, improve initial stabilization on oral naltrexone, and improve long-term outcome, particularly when combined with Behavioral Naltrexone Therapy. 3. Patients who exhibit escalating levels of commitment language strength throughout one early session of BNT will remain in treatment longer, will take more doses of naltrexone, and will provide a higher percentage of opiate-free urines. 4. Increased commitment language strength on the part of the SO monitor will contribute independently to the outcome of the identified patient, when controlling for patient level commitment. A critical objective of this current proposal is to improve retention, particularly in the initial weeks of treatment. Preliminary work with a new depot formulation of naltrexone was conducted (Comer et al, 1999, unpublished data), showing that it is well tolerated and provides therapeutic blood levels and blockade of opiate effects for up to four weeks after a single injection. By removing the option of stopping naltrexone to sample heroin, a common mode of relapse, we hope to prevent early attrition and fully expose all patients to the behavioral regimen of BNT, intended to shape strong compliance with oral naltrexone and motivation for abstinence and lifestyle change. 160 heroin-dependent individuals seeking treatment will be recruited at PI (STARS) or referred from other sites (e.g., private physician; other detoxification programs). Prospective patients will be offered hospitalization for detoxification for rapid transition to naltrexone followed by outpatient naltrexone maintenance and counseling for six months. All enrolled participants will be encouraged to return for follow-up assessment visits at one, three, and six months beyond the completion of their participation for research purposes. Patients will be randomly assigned to either the newly developed BNT or Compliance Enhancement Therapy (CET), a manual-guided approach developed by Carroll and O'Malley at Yale University as a control condition for psychotherapy studies with substance dependent patients. Patients will also be randomly assigned to receive either active or placebo injections of depot naltrexone prior to discharge from the detoxification. Therefore, there will be four treatment conditions with 40 participants per condition. These four conditions include: 1) BNT plus two doses of depot naltrexone prior to hospital discharge; 2) BNT plus two placebo injections; 3) Compliance Enhancement (CE), simulating standard treatment with oral naltrexone plus two depot naltrexone injections; and 4) CE plus two placebo injections.

Interventions

long-acting depot parenteral formulation of naltrexone

Compliance enhancement (CE), simulating standard treatment with oral naltrexone

DRUGBNT

behavioral therapy with oral naltrexone maintenance for the treatment of heroin addiction

Sponsors

National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
CollaboratorNIH
New York State Psychiatric Institute
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
FACTORIAL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE (Subject, Outcomes Assessor)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 60 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

1. Adult, aged 18-60. Clinical Interview. 2. Meets DSM-IV criteria for current opiate dependence disorder, supported by a positive urine for opiates and a positive naloxone challenge test if the diagnosis is unclear. If participating as an outpatient only, recent opiate dependence must be confirmed by clinical history and/or communication with former treatment provider. Clinical and SCID interview. Urine toxicology. Naloxone Challenge (see Procedures) Communication with former treatment provider. 3. Able to give informed consent. Clinical interview and mental status exam 4. There must be one qualified significant other who is willing to be interviewed and participate in program in order for a subject to be included in the study. Clinical interview, and statement by significant other.

Exclusion criteria

1. Pregnancy, lactation, or failure in a sexually active woman to use adequate contraceptive methods. Clinical Interview, physical examination, serum pregnancy test 2. Active medical illness which might make participation hazardous, such as untreated hypertension, acute hepatitis with SGOT or SGPT levels \>2-3 times normal, unstable diabetes, chronic organic mental disorder (e.g., AIDS dementia). Clinical Interview, physical examination, laboratory (Chem-20, CBC, urinalysis), ECG 3. Active psychiatric disorder which might interfere with participation or make participation hazardous, including DSM-IV schizophrenia, bipolar disorder with mania or psychosis, and depressive disorder with suicide risk or 1 or more suicide attempts within the past year. Clinical and SCID interview, clinical mental status examination, discussions with previous psychiatrist or treatment provider if formerly in treatment. 4. History of allergic reaction to buprenorphine, naloxone, naltrexone, clonidine, or clonazepam. Clinical Interview 5. Currently prescribed or regularly taking opiates for chronic pain or medical illness. Clinical Interview 6. Current participation in another intensive substance abuse treatment program. Clinical Interview 7. Current participation in a methadone maintenance treatment program and/or regular use of illicit methadone (\>30 mg per week). Clinical Interview; Urine toxicology. 8. Only available significant other is an active substance abuser, has an active psychiatric or medical illness which would interfere with participation (e.g., chronic psychosis, depression with suicide risk), or has a history of significant physical violence with the participant. Clinical Interview 9. History of accidental drug overdose in the last three years as defined as an episode of opioid-induced unconsciousness or incapacitation, whether or not medical treatment was sought or received. Clinical Interview

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
proportion of patients relapsing to illicit opiates based on urine toxicology and self report.over 6 months of trial or length of participationproportion of patients relapsing to opiate use
proportion of patients retained in treatmentover course of 6 months of trialproportion of patients retained over the course of the trial

Countries

United States

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026