Personalized Approach Bias Modification in Heavy Drinking Veterans With Mild to Moderate Traumatic Brain Injury
- Conditions
- Mild-Moderate Traumatic Brain InjuryAlcohol Use Disorder
- Interventions
- Behavioral: Sham ConditionBehavioral: Personalized VR Alcohol Approach Bias Modification (ApBM) Condition
- Registration Number
- NCT06380985
- Lead Sponsor
- VA Office of Research and Development
- Brief Summary
The project will examine the neural associations of alcohol approach-bias and investigate the extent to which a neuroscience-based personalized cognitive training program will remediate alcohol approach-bias and improve recovery outcomes among heavy drinking Veterans with alcohol use disorder (AUD) and a history of mild-moderate traumatic brain injury (mmTBI). Alcohol approach-bias modification (ApBM) is a cognitive training intervention designed to interrupt and modify automatic approach processes in response to alcohol cues. Modification of alcohol approach-bias and reductions in heavy alcohol use can be expected to reduce behaviors of self-harm and violence, increase adherence to medical care, reduce drinking-related medical costs, and promote healthier relationships. The long-term goal is to demonstrate the efficacy of ApBM to promote recovery from AUD in Veterans with chronic mmTBI. The investigators also aim to identify neural mechanisms associated with ApBM and other neurocognitive predictors of successful recovery. The evidence garnered from this study will be useful to inform the development of other behavioral and pharmacological treatments for Veterans with AUD with a history of mmTBI.
- Detailed Description
This study is the first to test if Alcohol approach-bias modification (ApBM), delivered through virtual reality, as an add-on to outpatient treatment can reduce heavy alcohol use and improve neuro-cognitive outcomes among Veterans with mild to moderate traumatic brain injury (mmTBI) engaged in outpatient treatment for alcohol use disorder (AUD).
This will be a Phase II double-blind, randomized, sham-controlled clinical trial. Approximately 100 heavy drinking Veterans with alcohol use disorder (AUD) and a history of mild to moderate traumatic brain injury (mmTBI) will be randomized into the study to complete a 3-week of either personalized ApBM or sham training (9 training sessions). Immediately following the 3-week training, a post-intervention Week-4 assessment will be administered. The participants will also be re-assessed again at Week 12 as the last study visit.
The aims of the study are as follows:
Aim 1: Establish the efficacy of a personalized alcohol ApBM to promote recovery from AUD among heavy drinking Veterans with a history of mmTBI.
Aim 2: Evaluate alcohol ApBM related change in fMRI cue-induced craving outcomes of treatment response within Default Mode Network.
Aim 3: Assess alcohol approach bias modification-related improvement in cognitive executive functioning domains that typically show deficit in heavy drinking Veterans with mmTBI and replicate preliminary associations between executive function domains and alcohol approach bias.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- WITHDRAWN
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- Not specified
- A history of mild-moderate TBI, as defined by American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine (ACRM), in the chronic, stable phase of recovery (>6 months from injury)
- Heavy drinking defined by NIH/NIAAA criteria (>7 drinks/week for women; >14 drinks/week for men) for at least one week in the last 90 days
- Moderate to severe criteria for current alcohol use disorder (AUD) by DSM-5
- Participants must also be engaged in VA outpatient AUD treatment and express a desire to reduce, stop, or maintain cessation of alcohol use
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Unstable clinically significant psychiatric disorders or medical conditions that would create excessive risks, in the clinical judgment of the Principle Investigator
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Current or history of the following:
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intrinsic cerebral tumors
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demyelinating and neurodegenerative diseases
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aneurysm
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arteriovenous malformations
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cerebrovascular or peripheral vascular disease
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severe or penetrating traumatic brain injury
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documented learning disabilities
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surgical implantation of neurostimulators or cardiac pacemakers and any other MRI contraindications
- These conditions/diseases are known to influence the neurocognitive and MR-derived neurobiological measures proposed in this application
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Female participant who is pregnant or actively attempting to conceive (to prevent any unnecessary exposure to high magnetic fields or radiofrequency energy to the unborn child)
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Concurrent participation in another clinical trial on AUD or TBI study
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Requiring acute medical detoxification from alcohol, based on a score of 12 or more on the Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment of Alcohol Scale (CIWA-AD)
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Legal mandate to participate in an alcohol treatment program
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Presence of severe TBI or penetrating head trauma
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Starting use of AUD treatment medications (disulfiram, naltrexone, or acamprosate) within the past 4 weeks (must be on AUD treatment for longer than 4 weeks)
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Sham Condition Sham Condition Sham training will consist of 9 cognitive training sessions, each session lasting approximately 20 minutes completed on separate days over 3 weeks. Each session requires the participant to respond to 240 visual stimuli using a push or pull motion as quickly as possible. Personalized VR Alcohol Approach Bias Modification (ApBM) Condition Personalized VR Alcohol Approach Bias Modification (ApBM) Condition The Personalized VR ApBM will consist of 9 cognitive training sessions, each session lasting approximately 20 minutes completed on separate days over 3 weeks. Each session requires the participant to respond to 240 visual stimuli using a push or pull motion as quickly as possible.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Percent of Heavy Drinking Days 90 days post-randomization The primary endpoint is percent of heavy drinking days during the 90 days post-randomization into treatment. A heavy drinking day is defined using NIH/NIAAA criteria, drinking more than 4 drinks a day for men and more than 3 drinks a single day for women.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Cue-induced fMRI BOLD-signal craving activation contrasts Week 4 - The week following completion of cognitive training. BOLD-signal craving activation contrasts (alcohol cues \> neutral cues) in amygdala, nucleus accumbens, and posterior cingulate cortex.
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
San Francisco VA Medical Center, San Francisco, CA
🇺🇸San Francisco, California, United States