Funded Projects

Explore our currently funded projects. You may search with all three fields, then focus your results by applying any of the dropdown filters. After customizing your search, you may download results and even save your specific search for later.

Project # Project Title Research Focus Area Research Program Administering IC Sort descending Institution(s) Investigator(s) Location(s) Year Awarded
R43DA056275-01
Digital Peer Support for Opioid Use Disorders: Scaling Chat Support Groups to meet Community Needs Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NIDA Beacon Tech, Inc. COHEN, TRACEY Damascus, MD 2022
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: America’s Startups and Small Businesses Build Technologies to Stop the Opioid Crisis (R43/R44 - Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-19-019
Summary:

Most people with opioid use disorder are either not in treatment or receive inconsistent treatment. Peer support is proven to be effective at engaging patients who are unwilling or unable to seek traditional treatment, but commonly available group support models are often separate from other clinical care or are otherwise hard for patients to access. This research will test a novel, machine learning enabled, digital peer support program added to an anonymous text-based social network that can provide 24/7 support for patients at all stages of recovery. The project will examine the ability of this digital service to engage and retain patients with opioid use disorder and will also develop novel techniques to automatically analyze patient messages for clinical and social determinants of health-related needs.

1R44DA058467-01
Development of a Novel Calcium Channel Therapeutic for Opioid Use Disorder Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NIDA VIVREON BIOSCIENCES, LLC GREENBERG, MILTON L San Diego, CA 2023
NOFO Title: Developing Regulated Therapeutic and Diagnostic Solutions for Patients Affected by Opioid and/or Stimulants use Disorders (OUD/StUD) (R43/R44 - Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-23-021
Summary:

Hospitalized patients often receive opioids for pain and sleep management, which can contribute to opioid dependence and continued use after leaving the hospital. Even when hospital stays are extended to wean people from opioids, these patients remain at increased risk for opioid use disorder and withdrawal.  This project will develop a novel small molecule medication that blocks nerve inflammation to prevent opioid dependence in hospitalized patients receiving opioids. 

2R44DA043288-02
MINDFULNESS MOBILE APP TO REDUCE ADOLESCENT SUBSTANCE USE Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NIDA Oregon Research Behavioral Intervention Strategies Smith, Dana K Eugene, OR 2019
NOFO Title: PHS 2018-02 Omnibus Solicitation of the NIH for Small Business Innovation Research Grant Applications (Parent SBIR [R43/R44] Clinical Trial Required)
NOFO Number: PA-18-573
Summary:

Adolescents in the juvenile justice system demonstrate very high rates of tobacco, alcohol, and other drug use (ATOD), with rates that are estimated to be three times higher than non-justice-involved youth. Substance-abusing youth are at higher risk than nonusers for mental health problems, including depression, conduct problems, personality disorders, suicidal thoughts, attempted suicide, and completed suicide, as well as detrimental effects on neural development related to substance use. This project aims to adapt and test the feasibility and efficacy of a smartphone application (app) intervention prototype that would help adolescent substance users reduce or quit their substance use. The program, entitled Rewire, is based on the primary substance use cessation components tested in previous work with juvenile justice-involved adolescents and on intervention components shown to be central to smoking cessation, and applies a mindfulness approach as the guiding framework for the intervention.

1R43DA046973-01
Device to Measure Pain using Facial Expression Recognition with Patiene PAINReportitA Tablet Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NIDA ENSURING, LLC CHEN, ZHANLI Seattle, WA 2019
NOFO Title: Development of a Device to Objectively Measure Pain (R43/R44)
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-18-012
Summary:

Even though pain is a nearly universal experience, objective measurements of pain remain difficult. Given that responding to the opioid crisis will require both better ways to manage pain and better ways to detect drug-seeking behavior, finding approaches to objectively measure pain is crucial. The goal of this project is to develop a product that will objectively measure pain using computer vision and machine learning technologies together with tablet-based self-reported pain data from patients for research or clinical purposes. The product will be low cost, involving one or two cameras to record the video and a computer to analyze the video in almost-real time, and will involve software that can be portable to ordinary personal computers and tablets. The project will capture facial expressions related to genuine pain and integrate it with patients’ self-reported pain data, in order to refine the product and create an objective measure of pain intensity that can be used in clinical settings and test its accuracy. This new tool has the potential to help rectify the poor pain outcomes that still plague Americans with opioid addiction, cancer, and other health conditions in many health care settings.

1R44DA046316-01A1
A Phase 1 Randomized Single Oral Dose Four Period Cross-Over Study Investigating Omnitram Dose Proportionality and Food Effect in Normal Human Subjects Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NIDA SYNTRIX BIOSYSTEMS, INC. Kahn, Stuart J Auburn, WA 2019
NOFO Title: PHS 2017-02 Omnibus Solicitation of the NIH, CDC, and FDA for Small Business Innovation Research Grant Applications (Parent SBIR [R43/R44])
NOFO Number: PA-17-302
Summary:

From 2009 to 2013, the utilization of the Schedule II opioids codeine, OxyContin, and fentanyl declined significantly, down about 14 percent for all three drugs. In sharp contrast, the use of tramadol, a Schedule IV controlled substance, increased by 32.5 percent. Schedule IV substances have lower potential for abuse and harm than Schedule II substances, and the fortuitous trend to tramadol has reduced the use of the relatively unsafe Schedule II opioids dramatically. However, tramadol is less effective in some individuals with a particular gene variant that makes them unable to metabolize it well. A new analgesic, omnitram, uses similar mechanisms to tramadol but is not as dependent on this gene. This SBIR Fast-Track project will conduct a Phase 1 clinical trial of Omnitram in normal human subjects. Success in this in-patient Phase 1 clinical trial will provide direct support for Omnitram’s continued clinical development toward FDA approval.

1R44DA050339-01
Transforming smartphones into active sonar systems to detect opioid overdose Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NIDA SOUND LIFE SCIENCES, INC. GILLESPY, THURMAN (contact); GOLLAKOTA, SHYAMNATH ; SUNSHINE, JACOB Seattle, WA 2019
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: America’s Startups and Small Businesses Build Technologies to Stop the Opioid Crisis (R43/R44 - Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-19-019
Summary:

Deaths from opioid overdose are highly preventable with early detection and administration of naloxone, but overdose victims often die because they are alone or among untrained or impaired bystanders and thus do not receive timely resuscitation. There is an urgent, unmet need for a low-barrier, easily scalable solution that can identify opioid overdoses in real time and rapidly connect victims to naloxone therapy. This proposal seeks to commercialize an innovative overdose detection software product that can be downloaded on any commodity smartphone and can detect opioid- induced respiratory failure (i.e., overdose) and summon help. The software-only product, SecondChance, converts a smartphone into a short-range active sonar system capable of monitoring breathing and detecting overdose.

1R43DA058614-01
Combination Therapeutic for Chronic Opioid Use Disorder Relapse Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NIDA APHIOS CORPORATION CASTOR, TREVOR P Woburn, MA 2023
NOFO Title: PHS 2022-2 Omnibus Solicitation of the NIH, CDC and FDA for Small Business Innovation Research Grant Applications (Parent SBIR [R43/R44] Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: PA-22-176
Summary:

Side effects from taking the opioid receptor blocker naltrexone make it difficult for patients to adhere to treatment with this medication for opioid use disorder. Cannabidiol (CBD), a bioactive ingredient of cannabis, is not an opioid and is non-psychoactive. Previous research shows that CBD blocks opioid-seeking behaviors, craving, and withdrawal. This project will develop tiny particles containing CBD and low-dose naltrexone. The research will determine if this combined version of CBD and naltrexone helps people stay in treatment and prevents relapse without problematic side effects. 

1R41DA048689-01
BEST-OUD: Behavioral Economic Screening Tool of Opioid Use Disorder for use in clinical practice Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NIDA BEAM DIAGNOSTICS, INC SNIDER, SARAH EMILY Roanoke, VA 2019
NOFO Title: PHS 2018-02 Omnibus Solicitation of the NIH for Small Business Technology Transfer Grant Applications (Parent STTR [R41/R42] Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: PA-18-575
Summary:

A critical line of defense against opioid use disorder (OUD), one of the nation’s leading preventable causes of death, must be standardized screening provided by the patient’s primary care physician, psychiatrist, and/or counselor. Standardized screening methods for opioids, however, are simply inferior and no gold standards exist. This project aims to develop a validated, theoretically guided tool that provides clinicians with information beyond OUD symptoms using reinforcer pathology, a measure of severity derived from the synergy between excessive delay discounting and high behavioral economic demand. The Behavioral Economic Screening Tool (BEST-OUD) will use these combined measures in a mobile tablet application to enable clinicians to screen for OUD.

1R44DA050375-01
A Novel Workflow to Screen for Illicit Drug Exposure in Newborns Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NIDA BAEBIES, INC. KENNEDY, ADAM Durham, NC 2019
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: America’s Startups and Small Businesses Build Technologies to Stop the Opioid Crisis (R43/R44 - Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-19-019
Summary:

Rates of neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) have skyrocketed during the last decade, and estimates suggest that 5% of mothers use at least one addictive drug during their pregnancy. To address this public health crisis, multiple groups—including the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the American Academy of Pediatrics—recommend universal screening of substance use in pregnancy using standardized behavioral scoring tools. Unfortunately, such tools are often biased due to subjective scoring or self-reporting errors, and fail to identify babies who did not receive proper prenatal care. This project will develop a fast and accurate NAS screening tool that pairs a simple sample preparation protocol with a high-sensitivity panel of homogeneous enzyme immunoassays recognizing five common classes of drugs: fentanyl, morphine, amphetamine/methamphetamine, cocaine, and benzodiazepines. The potential benefits of such a system include reduced length of hospitalization for unaffected newborns, accelerated time to confirmatory results (under 2 hours), faster resolution of acute withdrawal symptoms, and improved referral to family/maternal support services.

1R43DA050393-01
Evaluation of the therapeutic potential of exclusive antagonists of extrasynaptic NMDA receptors for treatment of opioid use disorders Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NIDA NEURANO BIOSCIENCE MOLOKANOVA, ELENA Encinitas,CA 2019
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: America’s Startups and Small Businesses Build Technologies to Stop the Opioid Crisis (R43/R44 - Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-19-019
Summary:

Novel therapies that could alleviate the severe symptoms of opioid withdrawal and/or reduce risk of relapse could help address the devastating opioid crisis. Memantine, an FDA-approved NMDA receptor antagonist, has shown encouraging results as an adjunct to existing opioid use therapies. Its therapeutic efficacy likely derives from its preferential binding to NMDA receptors located outside the synapse, since broad spectrum NMDA receptor antagonists are associated with multiple clinical side effects. This project will use a preclinical model to evaluate a nanostructured version of memantine (AuM) that physically prevents its binding to synaptic NMDA receptors but allows activation of extrasynaptic receptors with potency exceeding that of free memantine.

1R44DA049493-01
A Prescription Digital Therapeutic to Promote Adherence to Buprenorphine Pharmacotherapy for Patients with Opioid Use Disorder Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NIDA PEAR THERAPEUTICS, INC. KERN, AUDREY; PALLONE, DAVINA Boston, MA 2019
NOFO Title: Loyalty and Reward-Based Technologies to Increase Adherence to Substance Use Disorder Pharmacotherapies (R43/R44 - Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-19-014
Summary:

Opioid use disorder (OUD) is a key driver of the current opioid epidemic in the United States, but nearly 80% of individuals with OUD do not receive treatment. Buprenorphine medication-assisted treatment (MAT) is an effective form of care for OUD. This project will develop a state-of-the-art, digital therapeutic tool that effectively promotes buprenorphine adherence by providing contingency management rewards and educational content and enables home induction using a new self-monitoring support tool. This tool, named reSET-O+, will be integrated with Pear Therapeutics’ reSET-O, an FDA market-authorized mobile application delivering validated behavioral therapy and intended for use in conjunction with buprenorphine and standard outpatient treatment for OUD.

2R44DA051289-02
Wearable Sensor for Opioids Detection Based on Electrochemical Sensor Array Integrated with Bluetooth Device Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NIDA EMITECH, INC. LEVITSKY, IGOR A Fall River, MA 2022
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: America’s Startups and Small Businesses Build Technologies to Stop the Opioid Crisis (R43/R44 - Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-19-019
Summary:

This project will develop and refine a wearable device (forearm bracelet) designed to rapidly sense and report the presence of opioids in the wearer. This research will optimize this device to provide ultra-high sensitivity, enhanced drug specificity, long-term durability, low power consumption, and cost-effective production. The findings could support a path toward commercialization of this new device.

1R43DA046998-01
DEVELOPMENT OF A MULTIPLEX PEPTIDE ARRAY TO IDENTIFY PATIENTS WITH AN AUTOANTIBODY SIGNATURE FOR CHRONIC PAIN Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NIDA Affinergy, LLC Darby, Martyn Durham, NC 2019
NOFO Title: Development of a Device to Objectively Measure Pain (R43/R44)
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-18-012
Summary:

One of the most widely used treatments for chronic pain is opioid analgesics. Importantly, there is evidence of a pathological interaction between opioids and the immune system that can contribute to both opioid tolerance and elevated levels of pain. Chronic pain conditions for which opioids are most often prescribed have been shown to involve dysregulation of the immune system, which may contribute to pathological effects of opioid use in these patients. To address this unmet need, this study aims to develop a reliable, cost-effective, and non-invasive in vitro diagnostic assay for chronic pain with an underlying inflammatory pathology, as a blood test available in primary care settings, with the hope that doctors can use the test to identify which patients might benefit less from opioids and be more likely to become addicted.

1R41DA050364-01
Optimization of Betulinic Acid analogs for T-type calcium channel inhibition for non-addictive relief of chronic pain Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NIDA REGULONIX, LLC KHANNA Tucson, AZ 2019
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: America’s Startups and Small Businesses Build Technologies to Stop the Opioid Crisis (R43/R44 - Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-19-019
Summary:

The increase in prevalence of cancer coupled with an increase in the cancer survival rates due to chemotherapy regimens is transforming cancer pain into a large, unmet medical problem. Chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN) is a common and potentially dose-limiting side effect of many cancer drug treatment regimens and is caused in part by alterations in ion channels; blocking or depleting Cav3.2 channels in dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons should thus mediate analgesic effects. This proposal aims to develop and test potent, orally available, and selective Cav3.2 channel antagonists, building on the structure of a medicinal plant product—betulinic acid (BA)—that has been identified to be Cav3.2-selective and antinociceptive in CIPN. Such compounds could reduce the reliance on opioids in cancer patients.

1R44DA056251-01
Booth™ by Opio™: Developing Technology to Expand the Reach of Opioid Treatment Programs into Rural and Underserved Areas Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NIDA OPIO CONNECT, INC. NORBECK, AMBER Whitefish, MT 2022
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: America’s Startups and Small Businesses Build Technologies to Stop the Opioid Crisis (R43/R44 - Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-19-019
Summary:

People with opioid use disorder living in rural and underserved areas often have limited access to treatment. This project will develop a robotic treatment booth that allows opioid treatment centers to dispense opioid use disorder medications, while providing medical observation via real-time telehealth services. This new technology will provide a contactless patient–provider experience and leverage the expertise to expand treatment access to additional rural and underserved areas.

1R44DA049685-01
Noninvasive Brain Stimulation for Treating Addiction Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NIDA HIGHLAND INSTRUMENTS, INC DIPIETRO, LAURA; WAGNER, TIMOTHY ANDREW Cambridge, MA 2019
NOFO Title: PHS 2018-02 Omnibus Solicitation of the NIH for Small Business Innovation Research Grant Applications (Parent SBIR [R43/R44] Clinical Trial Required)
NOFO Number: PA-18-573
Summary:

Noninvasive brain stimulation (NIBS) may be effective in treating some forms of addiction, but the most common NIBS methods, Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) and Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS), have not been found to be effective in treating opioid use disorder (OUD). This project seeks to test the efficacy in OUD patients of Electrosonic Stimulation (ESStim™), an improved NIBS modality that combines independently controlled electromagnetic and ultrasonic fields to focus and boost stimulation currents via tuned electromechanical coupling in neural tissue.

2R44DA050358-02A1
A Project to Test the Efficacy and Safety of An Innovative Treatment for Opiate Use Disorders Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NIDA MINDLIGHT, LLC SCHIFFER, FREDRIC (contact); TEICHER, MARTIN H Newton, MA 2022
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: America’s Startups and Small Businesses Build Technologies to Stop the Opioid Crisis (R43/R44 - Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-19-019
Summary:

This project will refine an experimental non-invasive light therapy to create an effective, safe, convenient, and affordable method for treating opioid use disorder. This research will test whether a short treatment of near infra-red light administered through the skull can reduce drug use, relapse, and craving, and improve overall function in people with opioid use disorder. If effective, the findings could support a path toward commercialization of this new treatment.

2R44DA044062-02
LEVERAGING PREDICTIVE ANALYTICS WITHIN SOCIAL NETWORKS TO MAXIMIZE DRUG ANDALCOHOL TREATMENT EFFICACY AND RELAPSE PREVENTION Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NIDA Sober Grid Pesce, Christopher Neil Boston, MA 2019
NOFO Title: PHS 2018-02 Omnibus Solicitation of the NIH for Small Business Innovation Research Grant Applications (Parent SBIR [R43/R44] Clinical Trial Required)
NOFO Number: PA-18-573
Summary:

Sober Grid™ has developed a smartphone-based mobile application currently in use by more than 120,000 individuals worldwide who are in, or seeking, recovery from drug and alcohol addiction. The “Grid,” as it is known, is a mobile-based, social recovery community providing rapid context-specific peer support, efficient help seeking, motivational enhancement exercises, and member ratings of support content—all aimed to prevent relapse. The overarching goal of this phase II project is to extend the current capabilities of the Sober Grid app to achieve a comprehensive social recovery support app featuring intelligent, context-appropriate resource matching and 24/7 rapid-response peer coaching that is effective in reducing disordered substance use and is cost-effective. This projects tests whether providing this functionality to high-risk members will be acceptable, feasible, increase access to and engagement with resources, and have a positive effect in increasing time to relapse and days of consecutive abstinence.

1R43DA047781-01
A NOVEL FAST ACTING NALMEFENE FORMULATION FOR THE PREVENTION AND TREATMENT OF OPIOID OVERDOSE Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NIDA AVIOR, INC. Vasisht, Niraj Cary, NC 2019
NOFO Title: PHS 2018-02 Omnibus Solicitation of the NIH, CDC, and FDA for Small Business Innovation Research Grant Applications (Parent SBIR [R43/R44] Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: PA-18-574
Summary:

Rescue of victims of opioid overdose is accomplished by treatment with antagonist drugs, such as naloxone, that can reverse the respiratory depression. However, naloxone has serious liver toxicity and a short half-life, and its complete antagonism results in a withdrawal effect. Nalmefene is an FDA-approved opioid derivative that is an antagonist of the MOR and a weak agonist of the k-opioid receptors (KOR). An immediate release intravenous injectable formulation was approved by the FDA in 1995 for opioid overdose; however, the requirement for intravenous administration has limited its clinical use. This project, in partnership with Avior, aims to develop a fast-onset, rapidly-dissolving, mucoadhesive thin film formulation that carries uniformly distributed nalmefene nanoparticles on the surface of the film. This film, produced using Avior’s proprietary Speedit™ transmucosal drug delivery technology, rapidly delivers nalmefene when the film is placed in contact with the lower lining of the inner lip. This project will generate non-clinical data to support critical human clinical trials to determine if a transmucosal film can be developed with a rapid onset of action that is required for rescue of opioid overdose patients or taken prophylactically to prevent respiratory depression, to assess whether the effective speed of delivery is sufficient to conduct a human clinical trial.

1R43DA049650-01
Patient-level Risk Identifier Models for a Multifactor Opioid Abuse Risk Assessment Strategy Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NIDA PRINCIPLED STRATEGIES, INC. DuBose, Paul ENCINITAS, CA 2019
NOFO Title: PHS 2018-02 Omnibus Solicitation of the NIH, CDC, and FDA for Small Business Innovation Research Grant Applications (Parent SBIR [R43/R44] Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: PA-18-574
Summary:

This project, a partnership with Principled Strategies, will develop innovative, patient-level models for opioid risk identification and integrate them into the SafeUseNow managed care system—an actionable solution for combating prescription drug abuse that currently operates at the prescriber level only. Incorporating patient-level risk identifier models will strengthen an already powerful and demonstrably effective program and constitutes a critical step in generating a first-in-class, multifactor risk assessment strategy that is truly holistic. Using a variety of data sources, advanced analytics, and multiple empirically validated risk identification models, the groundbreaking advancement in SafeUseNow technology will enable health care stakeholders to identify combinations of prescribers, patients, and pharmacies whose behaviors may contribute to prescription drug abuse. This project will work to obtain new datasets for analysis, assess them, and use them to build national patient-level risk models for relevant outcomes, which will enable the development and evaluation of a next-generation prototype for a patient-level version of SafeUseNow.

1R43DA050360-01
Transcutaneous auricular neurostimulation for neonatal abstinence syndrome Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NIDA SPARK BIOMEDICAL INC KHODAPARAST, NAVID (contact); JENKINS, DOROTHEA DENISE Friendswood, TX 2019
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: America’s Startups and Small Businesses Build Technologies to Stop the Opioid Crisis (R43/R44 - Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-19-019
Summary:

As of 2012, an infant with neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) was born every 25 minutes in the United States, accounting for more than $1.5 billion in national health care expenditures. These infants frequently require hospital stay in a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU), with an average hospital stay of 25 days at an average treatment cost of $66,000. Treatment of NAS usually follows a multimodal regime based on drug therapy with an oral morphine solution, mostly in combination with a sedative, but there is a need for nonpharmacological approaches. This project will test a transcutaneous auricular neurostimulation device to help NAS babies recover from opioid withdrawal without harmful side effects. The non-invasive, auricular neurostimulation device will be placed around the ear (similar to a hearing aid), and stimulation will be delivered transcutaneously.

1R44DA050357-01
An optimized screening platform for identifying and quantifying biased agonists as drugs for the treatment of Opioid Use Disorder Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NIDA MONTANA MOLECULAR, LLC QUINN, ANNE MARIE (contact); HUGHES, THOMAS E Bozeman, MT 2019
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: America’s Startups and Small Businesses Build Technologies to Stop the Opioid Crisis (R43/R44 - Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-19-019
Summary:

As the opioid crisis claims more and more lives, there is a need to develop new, safer analgesics. Biased agonists could activate beneficial signaling pathways while avoiding those that cause adverse effects. This project aims to speed the discovery of non-addictive analgesics by providing drug discovery teams with simpler, more robust, more quantitative assays for agonist bias. The goal is to optimize and test new assays for agonist bias at NOP, D3 dopamine, CB1 cannabinoid, and OPRM1 opioid receptors, which couple to both the Gi and ?-arrestin signaling pathway, and create new tools to improve the analysis of structure/activity relationships that can be used in drug discovery and distribute to researchers who are developing new drugs for OUD.

3R44DA044083-03S1
CLINICAL DATA INTELLIGENCE & ADVANCED ANALYTICS TO REDUCE DRUG DIVERSION ACROSS THE CARE DELIVERY CYCLE AND DRUG SUPPLY CHAIN IN HEALTH SYSTEMS Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NIDA Invistics Corporation Knight, Thomas Peachtree Corners, GA 2019
NOFO Title: PHS 2016-02 Omnibus Solicitation of the NIH, CDC, FDA, and ACF for Small Business Innovation Research Grant Applications (Parent SBIR [R43/R44])
NOFO Number: PA-16-302
Summary:

There are alarming rates of substance abuse and diversion in hospitals, with multiple studies finding that roughly 10% of our nation’s nurses, anesthesiologists, and pharmacists are currently diverting drugs in their workplaces. Diversion continues even though most hospitals already lock addictive drugs in Automated Dispensing Machines (ADMs) and run monthly “anomalous usage” computer reports to try to detect diversion. This SBIR project will research mechanisms to detect when health care workers (HCWs) in hospitals steal or “divert” legal drugs, either to abuse themselves or to illegally sell to others, by building a computer system with (a) automated data feeds from multiple existing hospital computer systems and (b) advanced analytics to flag potential diversion for investigation. This research has the potential to reduce injuries to HCWs who are becoming addicted, destroying their careers, jeopardizing their patients’ safety, and increasingly dying from drug diversion overdoses.

1R44DA046151-01
RAE (REALIZE, ANALYZE, ENGAGE)- A DIGITAL BIOMARKER BASED DETECTION AND INTERVENTION SYSTEM FOR STRESS AND CRAVING DURING RECOVERY FROM SUBSTANCE ABUSE DISORDERS Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NIDA ContinueYou, LLC Reinhardt, Megan Rois Bristol, ME 2019
NOFO Title: Wearable to Track Recovery and Relapse Factors for People w/ Addiction (R43/R44)
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-18-010
Summary:

For many individuals in recovery from a substance use disorder, certain cues—including stress and drug-related cues—can trigger a physiological state in which they are more likely to relapse. In this SBIR project, the investigators intend to deploy a system—consisting of a wearable sensor, a smartphone app, and a clinical portal—to provide individuals in recovery and their treatment providers with an opportunity to identify moments of high risk for relapse and to access real-time intervention opportunities. The sensors will identify signals of stress or drug use, interface with a smartphone app, and provide options for annotations, stress-reduction techniques, or contact with an individual’s support system and treatment providers, as well as log and encourage healthy behaviors. This study will deploy and optimize the system, as well as test its effects on addiction-related outcomes, such as rate of relapse.

1R44DA059302-01
Development of an Opioid Sparing Therapeutic to Minimize Opioid Use Disorder and Tolerance in the Treatment of Pain Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NIDA AMALGENT THERAPEUTICS, LLC MEYN, MALCOLM A Greenville, NC 2023
NOFO Title: PHS 2022-2 Omnibus Solicitation of the NIH, CDC and FDA for Small Business Innovation Research Grant Applications (Parent SBIR [R43/R44] Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: PA-22-176
Summary:

Managing the risks and benefits of opioid medications can be difficult. Although prescription opioids alleviate pain for some patients, serious adverse effects include opioid use disorder. There is a critical, unmet need for new technologies that significantly minimize the opioid doses needed for effective relief from moderate to severe pain. This project will develop a novel combination treatment containing a small amount of morphine along with pramipexole, a drug approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for Parkinson’s disease and restless legs syndrome that reduces the reward-seeking behavior associated with opioids. The research will conduct safety studies to enable testing in human research participants.