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Clinical Trials/NCT03837860
NCT03837860
Terminated
Early Phase 1

Reducing the Abuse Liability of Prescription Opioids in Recreational Drug Users: A Pilot Study

The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio1 site in 1 country3 target enrollmentApril 1, 2019

Overview

Phase
Early Phase 1
Intervention
Oxycodone/Placebo
Conditions
Opioid Abuse, Unspecified
Sponsor
The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
Enrollment
3
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Change in Bipolar Visual Analog Scale (VAS) of Drug Likability
Status
Terminated
Last Updated
4 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

The consequences of prescription opioid abuse are serious and the number of deaths from unintended overdose have quadrupled over the last 15+ years. Opioid analgesics remain among the most commonly abused class of substances in the United States. Moreover, patients who take pain medications for legitimate reasons may develop an opioid use disorder (OUD), with as many as 1 in 4 patients becoming dependent on their pain medications. Because of changing access to prescription opioid analgesics due to an increasingly negative prescribing climate and changes in guidelines, patients often turn to heroin, with an estimated 1 in 15 pain patients trying heroin within 10 years. Pain is a symptom that can be severely debilitating and needs to be treated adequately to improve the quality of life. Clinicians, then, are in a proverbial "catch-22" situation whereby treating a patient's chronic pain also exposes them to medications with substantial abuse liability and overdose risk. In this proposal, a method aimed at reducing the abuse potential of prescription opioid medications, without altering their analgesic efficacy, is described.

The study team hypothesize that this can be accomplished by administering a fixed-dose-combination of an opioid with an atypical antipsychotic drug, in the same pill or capsule.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
April 1, 2019
End Date
January 21, 2022
Last Updated
4 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Crossover
Sex
All

Investigators

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Adult patients between 21 to 65 years of age, capable of understanding and providing consent in English, and capable of complying with the outcome instruments used.
  • Recreational opioid use (i.e. defined as prescription opioid use for nontherapeutic purposes on at least 10 occasions within the previous year and at least once in the 12 weeks prior to screening)
  • Reported tolerated doses to opioid medications

Exclusion Criteria

  • Currently receiving pharmacotherapy for psychiatric disorder, current suicide risk, or past history of major psychiatric disorder such as bipolar disorder/psychosis
  • Presence of dementia
  • Current neuroleptic medication in past 30 days
  • Pregnancy
  • Positive drug urine test for Barbiturates, Benzodiazepines, Methadone, and Buprenorphine.
  • Subjects with a prolonged QT interval greater than 430ms (i.e. QTc \>430ms)
  • Subjects with a heart rate of less than 60 or greater than 100bpm will be assessed by a physician for symptomatic bradycardia/tachycardia and eligibility determined on a case-by-case basis
  • Subjects with serum potassium and/or magnesium outside of normal range of our institutional laboratory within the past three months from time of screening.
  • Subjects who appears intoxicated on the day of study visit by an on-site physician.

Arms & Interventions

Oxycodone/Placebo

Each study participant will receive all three study interventions in random order.In this arm, the participant receives oxycodone or placebo

Intervention: Oxycodone/Placebo

Oxycodone/Risperidone

Each study participant will receive all three study interventions in random order. In this arm the participant receives a combination of oxycodone or risperidone

Intervention: Oxycodone/Risperidone

Oxycodone/Ziprasidone

Each study participant will receive all three study interventions in random order. In this arm the participant receives a combination of oxycodone or ziprasidone

Intervention: Oxycodone/Ziprasidone

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Change in Bipolar Visual Analog Scale (VAS) of Drug Likability

Time Frame: Study visit 2 to study visit 6, an average of 10 days

The bipolar VAS is used to measure the Change in magnitude of "drug liking". The Drug Effects Questionnaire AKA the bipolar VAS of Drug Likability is a 5 item self-administered assessment where participants place a mark on a line from 0 to 100, "strongly dislike" at 0 (on the left hand side), "no effect" at 50 (in the center) and "strongly like" at 100 (on the far right). Change from visit 2 to visit 6 will be measured.

Secondary Outcomes

  • Change in Profile of Mood States (POMS)(Study visit 2 to study visit 6, an average of 10 days)
  • Change in Addiction Research Center Inventory Short Form (ARCI-SF)(Study visit 2 to study visit 6, an average of 10 days)

Study Sites (1)

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