MedPath

Long Term Maintenance of Drug Abstinence

Phase 1
Completed
Conditions
Cocaine Dependence
Cocaine Abuse
Interventions
Behavioral: Contingency Management
Registration Number
NCT00842517
Lead Sponsor
Treatment Research Institute
Brief Summary

The purpose of this study is to develop a model for long-term maintenance of behavior change by examining the effects of extending the duration of contingency management (CM) for drug abuse on long-term abstinence outcomes. The primary hypothesis is that the Extended (36 week) CM group will have better long-term outcomes as exhibited by greater rates of abstinence at each follow-up assessment as compared to the Standard (12 week) CM group.

Detailed Description

This protocol examines the effects of extending the duration of contingency management (CM) for drug abuse and dependence on long-term abstinence outcomes. Following the tenets of basic behavioral research, we have outlined a model for long-term behavior maintenance that suggests that successful long-term behavior change does not focus on undoing old behaviors, but concentrates on developing new behaviors in a wide variety of new contexts, and provides enduring reinforcement for the new behaviors. The implication of this model is that in order to develop strategies for supporting long-term behavior change we need to determine the optimal duration of continuing treatment-arranged contingencies, better specify incompatible behaviors that emerge for patients who are successful in sustaining periods of continuous drug abstinence, and determine which incompatible behaviors are most likely to have naturally-occurring sustaining contingencies of reinforcement. This research will examine the model by randomly assigning cocaine-dependent or cocaine-abusing methadone maintenance patients to either a Standard (12 week) or Extended (36 week) period of contrived contingencies. We will be conducting a 2 year follow-up in order to investigate whether providing a longer duration of CM will result in a greater proportion of abstinent individuals during this time, how long the abstinence will last and to discover if longer durations of drug abstinence during the first year after treatment entry will predict better longer-term abstinence outcomes. We also compare outcomes on abstinence-related behaviors to see if provision of an extended voucher program leads to an increase in non-drug using natural reinforcers and activities. This study participates in the NIH-sponsored Health Maintenance Consortium designed to promote interchange of concepts, methods and measures related to the maintenance of long-term behavior change.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
166
Inclusion Criteria
  • Meet DSM-IV criteria for current cocaine dependence or abuse
  • Be willing and able to give valid contact information
  • Be receiving a stable dose of 40 milligrams or more of methadone
Exclusion Criteria
  • Are unable to give informed consent (fails simple open-ended consent quiz)
  • Answer yes to the question "Are you in recovery from gambling? That is, have you stopped gambling because of previous problems with gambling?"
  • Report that they have a romantic partner who is already participating in the study

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
ExtendedContingency Management36-week duration contingency management program
StandardContingency Management12-week duration contingency management program
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Duration of cocaine abstinenceEvery 2 weeks for the first year the participant is involved in the study; in addition to 3 month, 6 month, 9 month, 12 month, 15 month, 18 month, 21 month, and 24 month assessment points.
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
The presence and frequency of natural contingencies of reinforcement3 month, 6 month, 9 month, 12 month, 15 month, 18 month, 21 month, 24 month
The presence and frequency of meaningful correlates of long-term behavior changeEvery 2 weeks for the first year the participant is involved in the study; in addition to 3 month, 6 month, 9 month, 12 month, 15 month, 18 month, 21 month, and 24 month assessment points.
The presence and frequency of non-drug using activities3 month, 6 month, 9 month, 12 month, 15 month, 18 month, 21 month, 24 month

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Parkside Recovery

🇺🇸

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States

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