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Project 1 Aim 2, Adaptations of the Brain in Chronic Pain With Opioid Exposure

Project 1 Aim 2, Adaptations of the Brain in Chronic Pain With Opioid Exposure

Status
Active, not recruiting
Phases
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT05463367
Enrollment
60
Registered
2022-07-19
Start date
2021-01-01
Completion date
2025-06-01
Last updated
2024-11-27

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

Conditions

Opioid Use, Opioid Dependence, Opioid-use Disorder, Narcotic Use, Back Pain, Back Injuries, Chronic Pain, Chronic Low-back Pain, Pain, Chronic, Pain;Back Low;Chronic, Pain, Back

Keywords

norco, opioid, pain medication, tramadol, oxycodone, pain, chronic pain, chronic back pain, back pain, narcotics

Brief summary

This study is designed to track brain functional changes in individuals with i) chronic back pain + opioid use (CBP+O) and individuals with ii) chronic back pain + opioid misuse disorder (CBP+mOUD) following a brief drug delay and re-exposure manipulation. Re-exposure could be placebo, the participant's own opioid dose, or a dopaminergic treatment (DA+NSAID). The participants will be also evaluated for changes in cognition, emotion, and motor abilities with opioid delay and re-exposure to placebo, opioid, or DA+NSAID.

Detailed description

Screening Visit (2-3 hours) (if applicable): Participants that have participated in Project 1 Aim 1 within three months of consenting to Project 1 Aim 2 will not require a screening visit and can continue on to Visit 1, 2 and 3 of Aim 2. A screening visit will be applicable for those participants that did not participate in Project 1 Aim 1, and for those that had participated but did so more than three months prior to consenting to Project 1 Aim 2. Participants will be evaluated with inclusion/exclusion criteria and complete the informed consent. A medical/pain history will be taken and a physical exam will be completed by a physician. Participants will complete a number of questionnaires assessing health and medical history, past and current pain levels, and personality. Participants will have their blood drawn to confirm appropriate kidney and liver function (investigators will take \ 40mL of blood). Participants will also be asked to provide a urine sample to confirm if any illicit drugs are in their system. Participants will also be instructed to report their pain and craving ratings via an application that will be downloaded on their device. They will need to complete two ratings per day that they are involved in the study. Visit 1, 2, and 3 (6-8 hours): Participants will be instructed to not take their morning opioid medication. Upon arrival, participants will be asked to report their pain and craving using the Pain and Craving Index (PCI), which will be used as a baseline rating. They will complete the PCI once every hour throughout their visit. Once their PCI has increased by at least two-points from their baseline rating, the patient will undergo their first brain MRI scan (anatomical and functional scans). Between arrival and the first MRI, participants will complete several questionnaires regarding pain, mood, thoughts, and feelings. Directly after the MRI, participants will have their blood drawn. This blood draw will be used to quantitatively analyze the participants' opioid levels. Participants will then complete the NIH Toolbox. The NIH Toolbox is a compilation of activities that evaluate different cognitive, motor and emotional functions. Participants will then be randomized and receive Treatment Dose #1. Treatment dose #1 will be one of the following: a single dose of the participant's opioid prescription (provided by Northwestern Memorial Hospital's investigational pharmacy), carbidopa/levodopa (c-dopa/l-dopa), or placebo (lactose). Participants will then complete the same questionnaires as they previously had, undergo a second brain MRI scan, have their blood drawn, and complete a second NIH Toolbox. Participants will then receive Treatment Dose #2. For those participants that received their opioid medication for treatment dose #1, they will receive placebo for their treatment dose #2. For those participants that received carbidopa/levodopa or placebo for treatment dose #1, they will receive their opioid prescription for their treatment dose #2. After receiving treatment dose #2, participants will be done with their imaging visit. Each participant will have three total imaging visits. The activities within each imaging visit will be identical, the only variable will be the study intervention (opioid, c-dopa/l-dopa, or placebo) that they receive. All participants will receive each of the possible study interventions; however, the sequence of when they will receive each drug will be different from participant to participant. Neither participants nor the clinical coordinator/assistant will know which intervention the participant is receiving.

Interventions

Subjects will receive a single dose of carbidopa/levodopa, when applicable.This will be double-blinded, as neither participants nor study staff will know what medication the participant is receiving.

Subjects will receive a single dose of naproxen 500mg alongside carbidopa/levodopa, when applicable.This will be double-blinded, as neither participants nor study staff will know what medication the participant is receiving.

DRUGOpioids

Subjects will be pre-screened in regards to their opioid medication. They will receive a single dose of their opioid dose, when appropriate. This will be double-blinded, as neither participants nor study staff will know what medication the participant is receiving.

Sponsors

Shirley Ryan AbilityLab
CollaboratorOTHER
National Institutes of Health (NIH)
CollaboratorNIH
Northwestern University
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
CROSSOVER
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE (Subject, Investigator)

Masking description

All data analysis personnel are masked regarding groupings

Intervention model description

There will be 2 arms of participants, those who have back pain with opioid exposure, and those who have back pain with opioid exposure and opioid misuse disorder. Each participant, regardless of the arm that they are in, will receive each of the possible study interventions. The only difference will be the order of which they receive each interventions. Recruitment is completed. Of the collected subjects with opioid exposure none exhibited opioid misuse.

Eligibility

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

Inclusion criteria

* History of low back pain for a minimum of 6 months daily (prior to screening), meeting the Quebec Task Force Classification System symptom categories I-III; * Male or female, age equal or greater than 18 years, with no racial/ethnic restrictions; * Must be able to read and speak English and be willing to read and understand instructions as well as questionnaires; * Must be in generally stable health; * Must sign an informed consent document after a complete explanation of the study documenting that they understand the purpose of the study, procedures to be undertaken, possible benefits and potential risks, and are willing to participate; * Must have, on average ≥ 4/10 units of pain intensity over the course of a 1-4 week period prior to the brain scanning visit; * Must be willing to complete daily smartphone/computer eDiary ratings; * Must be on regular opioid therapy or for at least 3 months prior to randomization which will be up to the clinical investigator's decision * Must be on a short acting opioid therapy (anticipated duration of action \< 6 hours)

Exclusion criteria

* Low back pain associated with any systemic signs or symptoms, e.g., fever, chills; * Other comorbid chronic pain or neurological conditions; * Use of therapeutic doses of antidepressant medications at unstable doses (i.e., tricyclic depressants, SSRIs, SNRIs; low doses used for sleep may be allowed); * Significant other unstable medical disease such as diabetes, congestive heart failure, coronary or peripheral vascular disease, chronic obstructive lung disease, or malignancy; * Uncontrolled hypertension; * Renal insufficiency;(correlated creatinine clearance \< 40mL/min or serum creatinine ≥2) * Daily use of high doses of opioids,, as defined as \> 50mg morphine equivalent/day; * Any medical condition that in the investigator's judgment may prevent the individual from completing the study or put the individual at undue risk; * In the judgment of the investigator, unable or unwilling to follow protocol and instructions; * Evidence of poor treatment compliance, in the judgment of the investigator; * Intra-axial implants (e.g. spinal cord stimulators or pumps); * All

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Differences across drugs in Withdrawal relief assessed by Pain and Craving Index (PCI).3 weeksPain and Drug craving Index (PCI) will be used to evaluate self-reported medication cravings. Participants will complete the scale, before and after receiving the visit drug treatment. Changes in PCI scores (after minus before) will be compared between drugs (opioids vs. placebo vs. Carbidopa/Levodopa +naproxen).
Differences across drugs in pain changes as assessed by Numeric Rating Scale (0-10).3 weeksNRS scale will be used to evaluate self-reported pain. Participants will rate their pain before and after receiving the visit drug treatment. Changes in pain scores (after minus before) will be compared between drugs (opioids vs. placebo vs. Carbidopa/Levodopa +naproxen).

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Differences in pain changes (NRS) across High and Low Misuse groups measured by the Current Opioid Misuse Measure (COMM).3 weeksCurrent Opioid Misuse Measure (COMM) is a 17-item self-report measure of risk for aberrant medication-related behavior among persons with chronic pain who are prescribed opioids for pain. Participants will be divided into two groups: high COMM and low COMM. Changes in pain scores (after minus before) will be compared between COMM groups (high vs. low)
Differences in withdrawal changes (PCI) across High and Low Misuse groups measured by the Current Opioid Misuse Measure (COMM).3 weeksCurrent Opioid Misuse Measure (COMM) is a 17-item self-report measure of risk for aberrant medication-related behavior among persons with chronic pain who are prescribed opioids for pain. Participants will be divided into two groups: high COMM and low COMM. Changes in Withdrawal relief - PCI score (after minus before) will be compared between COMM groups (high vs. low).
Whole-cortex multi-receptor related activity3 weeksWe used the resting-state fMRI to generate whole-brain voxel-wise amplitude of low-frequency fluctuations (ALFF) maps that reflect the low-frequency energy of spontaneous BOLD activity. Cortex-wide receptor-related activity for each subject will be computed as the normalized dot product between ALFF maps and the standardized receptor density distribution maps obtained from Hensen et al 2022. This will result in one value per subject representing cortical receptor-related activity for any given receptor type. For this analysis we will focus on 3 receptors that we have shown to be modulated in long-term opioid use including the serotonin (5-HT1A and 5-HT1B) receptors and the µ-opioid (MOR) receptor. We will also investigate both dopamine (D1 and D2) receptors to test their modulation with administering dopamine+NSAID.

Countries

United States

Outcome results

None listed

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