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Pilot Study to Evaluate "Intégrer et Accompagner Les Consommations d'Alcool!" (IACA!)'s Impact and Transferability

Conditions
Addiction, Alcohol
Alcoholism
Craving
Registration Number
NCT04927455
Lead Sponsor
University Hospital, Bordeaux
Brief Summary

In France, alcohol consumption is the second most common cause of so-called preventable cancers after tobacco. Since 2014, in the "Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur" (PACA) region, the association Santé! has been developing an innovative intervention to support people suffering from alcohol-related addiction. This intervention, called IACA! must therefore be evaluated on a larger scale before conclusions about its effectiveness can be drawn from a comparative trial.

This evaluation requires significant human and material resources. It is therefore recommended to first assess the transferability of IACA! in other care centers in a pilot study.

Detailed Description

In France, 11% of cancers in men and 4.5% of cancers in women are attributed to alcohol consumption. It is the second leading cause of so-called preventable cancers, accounting for 28,000 alcohol-related cancers out of 352,000 new cases of cancer affecting annually adults (over 30 years of age). Overall, alcohol is among the top 3 factors contributing to Disability-Adjusted life year (DALYs) in France in 2017. Some cancer risks can be quantified as early as one drink a day (oesophagus, oral cavity, pharynx and breast in women). However, the risks associated with alcohol consumption remain influenced by the quantities consumed. There is therefore an interest, particularly for consumers of the largest quantities, in reducing the quantities consumed. In Europe, while people who drink more than 60 g/d of alcohol for men and 40 g/d for women are estimated to represent only 16.1% of the population for men and 9.3% for women, they represent 87% and 82% of alcohol-related morbidity and mortality respectively. Subjects with addiction (or substance use disorders) have an increased risk of social harm (1.5 to 3 times that of alcohol users without addiction), a higher mortality (1.4 to 6.5 compared to the general population) with a life expectancy of 9 to 20 years shorter than that of the general population. Moreover, even if the quantities consumed are not a valid individual diagnostic criterion, studies show a strong association between the quantity consumed and the diagnosis of addiction. Finally, some studies suggest that the prevalence of secondary harm from alcohol use follows an exponential curve as a function of alcohol consumption.

Since 2014, in the PACA region, the association Santé! has been developing an intervention to support people suffering from alcohol-related addiction. This intervention, called IACA! (Integrating and supporting alcohol consumption), differs from the support provided during rehabilitation cures and aims to: fight against discrimination and exclusion of people who drink alcohol, re-engage these individuals in the care process (because they have generally left it) by using the appropriate levers, promote well-being, improve quality of life and recovery and support the recovery in control of consumption. Thus, IACA!, through its philosophy and implementation, is based both on the risk reduction approach historically deployed with drug users and on the recovery approach, developed in the field of mental health. The first one-year results of this program were promising since, of 17 people who received the intervention, all had a social or health benefit, 13 of whom were associated with stabilization (n=4), reduction (n=7) or cessation (n=2) of alcohol use.

These promising results must therefore be evaluated on a larger scale before conclusions about its effectiveness can be drawn from a comparative trial. This type of evaluation requires significant human and material resources. It is therefore recommended to first assess in the field: 1) the conditions under which such an intervention is deployed in other centres (adaptations implemented by other centres to deploy IACA! for example, without distorting the intervention), 2) the acceptability and feasibility of the intervention in other centres (are the human and material resources on site sufficient for the successful deployment of the intervention?), 3) the acceptability and feasibility of the large-scale evaluation envisaged.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
32
Inclusion Criteria

Not provided

Exclusion Criteria

The beneficiaries will be excluded if they have a severe somatic or psychiatric pathology that is incompatible with understanding the assessment tools; difficulty understanding and/or writing French; if they are unreachable by telephone, if they are participating in another research project with an ongoing exclusion period, if they are placed under court protection and if they are pregnant.

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Severity of alcohol use12 months after the start of IACA
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Utility dimension of viability - craving12 months (M12)

Craving: average frequency and intensity in the last 30 days

Utility dimension of viability - alcohol consumption12 months (M12)

Average number of units of alcohol consumption in the past 30 days

Utility dimension of viability - disorders12 months (M12)

Presence of alcohol and other substance use disorders (past 12 months and past)

Viability and affordability6 to 12 months (M6 to M12)

Affordability for professionals and beneficiaries (financial, geographical, social and cultural levers and brakes of the intervention)

Feasibility study complicance12 months (M12)

The compliance rates; understanding, acceptability and feasibility of study questionnaires and data collection tools;

Utility dimension of viability - Inventory12 months (M12)

Inventory of medical, psychosocial and psycho-educational contacts in the last 30 days

Utility dimension of viability - QoL12 months (M12)

Quality of life

Viability and evaluability6 to 12 months (M6 to M12)

Evaluability of IACA: carrying out this evaluation, the availability of professionals and beneficiaries to answer questionnaires and interviews, missing data in the questionnaires etc.

Utility dimension of viability - severity12 months (M12)

Severity score for addictive substances and behaviors

Utility dimension of viability - Other substances12 months (M12)

Number of days of use of other substances/behaviours in the past 30 days

Viability and adaptability6 to 12 months (M6 to M12)

Adaptability of IACA! (integration of the action into the context and the current organisation of the centres)

Viability and acceptability6 to 12 months (M6 to M12)

Acceptability of IACA! by professionals and beneficiaries

Feasibility study ressources12 months (M12)

The ressources required (time required to complete all study forms, professional/centre capacity, etc.)

Conditions of transferability9 to 12 months (M9 to M12)

Conditions of transferability linked to the characteristics of the stakeholders and the context: contextual conditions for success within the centres, the characteristics of professionals and patients influencing outcomes

Viability and implementation6 to 12 months (M6 to M12)

Implementation of IACA! (process, resources, activities) including the respect of IACA! success principles (skills, postures)

Viability and utility6 to 12 months (M6 to M12)

"utility" dimension (as a complement to the secondary criteria) of viability through the recovery mechanisms identified as successful mental health recovery

Feasibility study capacity12 months (M12)

The centres' capacity for inclusion (eligibility, recruitment rate, refusal rate)

Trial Locations

Locations (2)

CH Perrens - Equipe Addiction

🇫🇷

Bordeaux, France

MéRISP - Université U1219

🇫🇷

Bordeaux, France

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