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 Institution(s) Investigator(s) Location(s) Sort descending Year Awarded
1R01DA057443-01
Peer-Delivered, Behavioral Activation Intervention to Improve Polysubstance Use and Retention in Mobile Telemedicine OUD Treatment in an Underserved, Rural Area Translation of Research to Practice for the Treatment of Opioid Addiction Improving Delivery of Healthcare Services for Polysubstance Use NIDA UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND, COLLEGE PARK MAGIDSON, JESSICA F (contact); KATTAKUZHY, SARAH M College Park, MD 2022
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Understanding Polysubstance Use and Improving Service Delivery to Address Polysubstance Use (R01 Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: DA22-047
Summary:

Polysubstance use, especially use of both opioids and stimulants, is compounding the already devastating effects of the opioid crisis in underserved rural areas. This project builds on a previously established treatment model for opioid use disorder that uses telehealth and mobile treatment units, which seeks to engage people in activities they enjoy, to help them avoid negative behaviors such as drug use. This research will evaluate the effectiveness of a behavioral treatment approach delivered by peer recovery support specialists in rural areas and using mobile treatment units. The project will measure the intervention’s effect on treatment retention and polysubstance use – as well as evaluate the intervention’s feasibility, acceptability, adoption, and economic value.

1U01DA055316-01
16/24 Healthy Brain and Child Development National Consortium Enhanced Outcomes for Infants and Children Exposed to Opioids HEALthy Brain and Child Development Study (HBCD) NIDA UNIV OF MARYLAND, COLLEGE PARK FOX, NATHAN A (contact); HARDEN, BRENDA J; RIGGINS, TRACY L College Park, MD 2021
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: HEALthy Brain and Child Development Study (Collaborative U01- Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-21-020
Summary:

The HEALthy Brain and Child Development National Consortium (HBCD-NC) will establish a normative model of developmental trajectories over the first 10 years of life. All sites in the HBCD-NC will carry out a common research protocol and will assemble and distribute a comprehensive research dataset to the scientific community. The HBCD-NC will collect neural, behavioral, physiological, and psychological measures, as well as biospecimens, to characterize neurodevelopmental trajectories. Most participants will be recruited in the second trimester of pregnancy, with a smaller subset recruited at birth, and followed for the first 10 years of life. The University of Maryland College Park study site is midway between Washington, DC, and Baltimore, Maryland, and will recruit a diverse sample of mother-infant pairs from across the region.

1R61AT010799-01
Peer-Delivered Behavioral Activation Intervention to Improve Adherence to MAT Among Low-Income, Minority Individuals With OUD Translation of Research to Practice for the Treatment of Opioid Addiction Behavioral Research to Improve Medication-Based Treatment NCCIH University of Maryland MAGIDSON, JESSICA F College Park, MD 2019
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Behavioral Research to Improve MAT: Behavioral and Social Interventions to Improve Adherence to Medication Assisted Treatment for Opioid Use Disorders (R61/R33 Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: RFA-AT-19-006
Summary:

Poor medication-assisted treatment (MAT) retention disproportionately affects low-income racial/ethnic minority individuals with opioid use disorder (OUD) and increases risk for relapse; therefore, evidence-based interventions are needed to improve MAT retention. Peer recovery coaches (PRCs), trained individuals with experiences with substance use disorder, may be uniquely suited to address common MAT retention barriers among underserved populations, including stigma, challenges navigating services, housing instability, and other structural and psychosocial factors. Preliminary work by the research team suggests that behavioral activation (BA) by PRCs may be a feasible, scalable reinforcement-based approach for improving MAT retention for low-income minority OUD individuals. The study builds upon the research team’s formative work to adapt and evaluate the effectiveness and implementation of a PRC-delivered BA intervention (Peer Activate) to improve MAT retention for low-income, minority individuals with OUD.

1UG3NS128439-01
Allosteric Targeting of Cannabinoid CB1 Receptor to Develop Non-Addictive Small Molecule Analgesics Preclinical and Translational Research in Pain Management Development and Optimization of Non-Addictive Therapies to Treat Pain NINDS Texas A&M Health Science Center LU, DAI (contact); SELLEY, DANA E; TAO, FENG College Station, TX 2022
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Non-addictive Analgesic Therapeutics Development [Small Molecules and Biologics] to Treat Pain (UG3/UH3 Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: RFA-NS-21-010
Summary:

Overreliance on opioids to treat chronic pain has been a contributor to the increase in individuals experiencing opioid addiction. This project aims to develop an innovative treatment approach for chronic pain that targets the cannabinoid receptor 1 (CB1R) to block the sensation of pain. The approach seeks to identify molecules that interact with a different part of the CBR1 receptor than do endocannabinoids and the primary active component of cannabis, tetrahydrocannabinol. Molecules that bind to and activate CBR1 in this different way (at an “allosteric” site) may produce nerve signaling that might differ from the effects of cannabis and endocannabinoids. This redirection of signaling pathways could help eliminate the risk of adverse effects observed with natural cannabinoids and other CBR1-binding molecules. The goal of this project is to identify a CB1R allosteric molecule, conduct studies toward obtaining federal permission to develop it as a medication, and to test it in a Phase I clinical study.

3UH3DA050174-02S2
Preventing Substance Misuse and Substance Use Disorder by Examining Service Provider Interactions, Discrimination, Ethnic Identity, Sexual Orientation Identity, and Housing First Outcomes New Strategies to Prevent and Treat Opioid Addiction Preventing Opioid Use Disorder NIDA OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY SLESNICK, NATASHA Columbus, OH 2021
NOFO Title: Notice of Special Interest to Encourage Eligible NIH HEAL Initiative Awardees to Apply for PA-20-222: Research Supplements to Promote Diversity in Health-Related Research (Admin Supp - Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: NOT-NS-20-107
Summary:

The parent project’s Housing First initiative can be divided into two interconnected goals: (1) to reduce the likelihood of substance misuse and the development of an opioid use disorder and (2) to provide youth with housing stability and opioid and related risk prevention services that will assist them in exiting homelessness. The proposed supplement project complements the goals of the parent grant project by exploring two additional components that are related to exiting homelessness and reducing substance misuse or the development of opioid use disorder: (1) to further investigate youth’s interactions with social service providers, via qualitative methods, with the goal of cultivating a detail understanding actionable practices as it relates to fostering successful interactions between substance using homeless youth and service providers and (2) to evaluate, via quantitative methods, the extent to which ethnic identity protects youth from the negative effects of discrimination, substance misuse, and the development of a opioid use disorder.

1R01DA059411-01
Building Social and Structural Connections for the Prevention of OUD Among Youth Experiencing Homelessness: An RCT Examining Biopsychosocial Mechanisms New Strategies to Prevent and Treat Opioid Addiction Preventing Opioid Use Disorder NIDA OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY FORD, JODI (contact); SLESNICK, NATASHA Columbus, OH 2023
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Preventing Opioid Misuse and Co-Occurring Conditions by Intervening on Social Determinants (R01 - Clinical Trials Optional)
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-23-051
Summary:

Multiple social determinants affect the health of youth experiencing homelessness. These include a lack of stable safe housing, income, education, food security, restricted access to services, as well as discrimination, victimization, and social isolation. This project will test the use of prevention efforts to address the factors that may be embedded within systems that serve this population, such as drop-in centers. The research will gather generalizable information about helping these youth along with cost estimates to inform future implementation efforts.

3UH3DA050174-02S1
Revision to the HOME Trial: Suicide Treatment Education and Prevention (HOME + STEP) New Strategies to Prevent and Treat Opioid Addiction Optimizing Care for People with Opioid Use Disorder and Mental Health Conditions NIDA OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY SLESNICK, NATASHA ; KELLEHER, KELLY J Columbus, OH 2020
NOFO Title: Notice of Special Interest: HEAL Supplements to Improve the Treatment and Management of Common Co-occurring Conditions and Suicide Risk in People Affected by the Opioid Crisis
NOFO Number: NOT-MH-20-025
Summary:

Homeless youth have high rates of alcohol and drug use, comorbid mental health conditions, and are at high risk for suicide. However, few preventive interventions have been proven for reducing substance use or addressing suicide among homeless youth. Resolution of youth homelessness through housing and prevention services, often referred to as ?Housing First? (HF), will be tested in the HOME (Housing, Opportunities, Motivation and Engagement) study, which aims to reduce opioid use and progression to opioid use disorder (OUD). This study will include suicide screening, treatment, education and prevention (STEP) to the model to examine whether HF provides secondary benefits for reducing suicidal ideation and behaviors among high risk homeless youth. STEP includes ongoing suicide screening procedures and Cognitive Therapy for Suicide Prevention (CTSP) for those at high risk for suicide. Youth (N=240) will be randomly assigned to receive HF + STEP + opioid and related risk prevention services (strengths-based outreach and advocacy; HIV Prevention; and motivational Interviewing) or to receive STEP + opioid and related risk prevention services, alone. Results from this study will inform the design and implementation of other national models of HF to address prevention of substance use and suicidal ideation and behaviors among homeless youth.

3R21MD011767-02S1
SUPPLEMENT TO OPIOID PRESCRIBING DISPARITIES IN A PUBLIC HEALTH CRISIS Clinical Research in Pain Management NIMHD Research at Nationwide Children's - Nationwide Children's Hospital CHISOLM, DEENA; DEANS, KATHERINE J Columbus, OH 2018
NOFO Title: Administrative Supplements to Existing NIH Grants and Cooperative Agreements (Parent Admin Supp Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: PA-18-591
Summary:

African American adults are less likely to receive analgesics, particularly opioids. Research in the pediatric surgical population is limited, but the pattern of disparate use of opioids appears consistent with adults. Furthermore, adolescent access to prescribed opioids has increased, both through physician prescribing and misuse of medications prescribed to family members or friends. This study will explore the interrelated impacts of policy, clinical need, and sociodemographic factors by combining Medicaid claims and electronic health record data with findings from a statewide opioid policy inventory. We will focus on discharge prescribing of opioids in three high-volume pediatric surgical procedures: tonsillectomy/adenoidectomy, supracondylar fracture, and appendectomy. We aim to 1) determine the extent of racial disparities in postoperative discharge opioid prescribing since the 2011 onset of enhanced opioid prescription reduction activities and 2) develop an expanded model to assess the linkage between differential opioid use for pediatric postoperative pain and opioid use-related outcomes.

1R01DA057668-01
Opioid and SUD Data Enclave (O-SUDDEn): Bringing Real-Time Data to the Opioid Crisis Cross-Cutting Research Leveraging Existing and Real-Time Opioid and Pain Management Data NIDA OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY FERNANDEZ, SOLEDAD A (contact); HUERTA, TIMOTHY R Columbus, OH 2022
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Data and Methods to Address Urgent Needs to Stem the Opioid Epidemic (R01- Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-22-044
Summary:

The lack of timely data about drug use and overdose deaths has hindered the ability of communities and state agencies to allocate resources to regions where they are most needed. This project will develop a secure data pool that combines individual and community-level real-time data from multiple sources, including urine drug testing. These data will then be used to model the contribution of opioid, cocaine, and stimulant use to overdoses, overdose deaths, and cases of substance use disorder. This research will also use urine drug testing results and demographic/contextual data to identify populations and subpopulations at highest risk of drug use and overdose. This information will be displayed through a data platform tailored to the needs of end users (e.g., communities or agencies) and with user-friendly tools that help users make informed decisions on where resources are most urgently needed.

1UH2AR076729-01
The Spine Phenome Project: Enabling Technology for Personalized Medicine Clinical Research in Pain Management Back Pain Consortium Research Program NIAMS OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY MARRAS, WILLIAM STEVEN (contact); KHAN, SAFDAR N; WEAVER, TRISTAN E Columbus, OH 2019
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Back Pain Consortium (BACPAC) Research Program Technology Research Sites (UH2/UH3 Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: RFA-AR-19-028
Summary:

Current diagnostics and treatments of chronic low back pain (cLBP) rely primarily on subjective metrics and do not target all the multidimensional biopsychosocial mechanisms. This multidisciplinary effort will develop and validate a digital health platform and provide meaningful data-driven metrics that enable an integrated approach to clinical evaluation and treatment of cLBP. This platform will facilitate the use of quantitative spinal motion metrics (function), patient-reported outcomes, and patient preference information to enable deep patient phenotyping and inform clinical decision making on personalized treatments in order to improve outcomes. This effort will involve software and hardware development to enable data collection, analysis, and visualization in clinical settings. The outcome of this project will be a digital health platform with data to support regulatory submission for clinical use. At the end of this effort, the researchers will have a validated tool for integration in clinical research studies supported by the BACPAC Consortium.

3UH3DA050174-02S3
Supplement to HOME Trial: Role of Justice Involvement in Implementation and Effectiveness of Housing First for Youth Experiencing Homelessness New Strategies to Prevent and Treat Opioid Addiction Preventing Opioid Use Disorder NIDA OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY NATASHA SLESNICK; KELLY J KELLEHER Columbus, OH 2023
NOFO Title: Notice of Special Interest (NOSI): HEAL Initiative: Regarding the Availability of Administrative Supplements to Support the Addition of Justice Measures
NOFO Number: NOT-DA-23-011
Summary:

Providing housing and prevention services (often referred to as “housing first”) has great potential to prevent opioid use disorder, continued homelessness, and other problem behaviors among youth experiencing homelessness. However, implementation of these services is challenging because criminal justice system involvement (which is common in this population) often prevents or delays access to housing. This project will explore interactions between criminal justice system involvement and the housing first intervention, toward reducing risks for opioid use and death among justice-involved youth experiencing homelessness

1UG3DA050174-01
Prevention of OUD: The HOME (Housing, Opportunities, Motivation and Engagement) Randomized Trial New Strategies to Prevent and Treat Opioid Addiction Preventing Opioid Use Disorder NIDA Ohio State University SLESNICK, NATASHA (contact); KELLEHER, KELLY J Columbus, OH 2019
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Preventing Opioid Use Disorder in Older Adolescents and Young Adults (ages 16–30) (UG3/UH3 Clinical Trial Required
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-19-035
Summary:

Evidence suggests that homeless youth have the highest rates of opioid use among youth subgroups in the country (Brands et al., 2005). Resolution of youth homelessness through housing and prevention services, often referred to as “Housing First”, has great potential to reduce the likelihood for the development of an opioid use disorder as well as other problem behaviors associated with living on the streets. However, only 20 percent to 30 percent of homeless youth samples report ever having stayed at a crisis shelter, 9 percent report having ever accessed mental health services, and 15 percent report ever having received treatment for substance use disorder (Ray, 2006), indicating a need to reach and engage youth in services that are feasible and acceptable. The results of this study will provide essential information for researchers and providers on the efficacy of housing plus opioid and related risk prevention services in a randomized controlled trial on opioid use, how moderators affect the response, and mechanisms underlying change.

3UH3AR076729-02S1
The Spine Phenome Project: Enhancing Patient Diversity Cross-Cutting Research Increasing Participant Diversity, Inclusion, and Engagement in HEAL Research NIAMS OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY MARRAS, WILLIAM STEVEN Columbus, OH 2022
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Notice of Special Interest (NOSI) regarding the Availability of Administrative Supplements to Support Strategies to Increase Participant Diversity, Inclusion and Engagement in Clinical Studies
NOFO Number: NOT-NS-22-066
Summary:

Chronic pain is a debilitating medical condition that affects roughly 50 million people in the United States. Current diagnostics and treatments rely primarily on subjective metrics and do not target the unique biological, psychological, and social factors that contribute to an individual’s pain. This project is part of the NIH Back Pain Consortium (BACPAC) program, a patient-centered effort to address the need for effective and personalized therapies for chronic low back pain. This research will enhance patient diversity within the BACPAC research participant population.

1UM1DA049417-01
HEALing Communities Study - Ohio Translation of Research to Practice for the Treatment of Opioid Addiction HEALing Communities Study NIDA OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY JACKSON, REBECCA D Columbus, OH 2019
NOFO Title: HEALing Communities Study: Developing and Testing an Integrated Approach to Address the Opioid Crisis (Research Sites) (UM1 - Clinical Trial Required)
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-19-016
Summary:

Although there are effective prevention and treatment programs and services to address opioid misuse, opioid use disorder (OUD), and overdose, gaps remain between those needing and those receiving prevention and treatment, in part because of a need to better understand how to make these programs and services most effective at a local level. The National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) launched the HEALing Communities Study to generate evidence about how tools for preventing and treating opioid misuse and OUD are most effective at the local level. This multisite implementation research study will test the impact of an integrated set of evidence-based practices across health care, behavioral health, justice, and other community-based settings. The goal of the study is to reduce opioid-related overdose deaths by 40 percent over three years. The Ohio State University is partnering with academic institutions in three other states to study the impact of these efforts in 67 highly affected communities. The study will also look at the effectiveness of coordinated systems of care designed to increase the number of individuals receiving medication to treat OUD, increase the distribution of naloxone, and reduce high-risk opioid prescribing.

1R43DA049300-01A1
PRAPELA™ SVS: A COST-EFFECTIVE STOCHASTIC VIBROTACTILE STIMULATION DEVICE TO IMPROVE THE CLINICAL COURSE OF INFANTS WITH NEONATAL ABSTINENCE SYNDROME Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NIDA PRAPELA, Inc. KONSIN, JOHN PHILLIP (contact); SINGH, RACHANA Concord, MA 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:

Maternal use and addiction to opioids or other drugs has resulted in an unprecedented rise in drug withdrawal complications in newborns known as neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS). While there is no accepted standard for treating NAS, non-pharmacological bundles are recommended as an initial course of treatment. Unfortunately, non-pharmacological care (swaddling, rocking, frequent feedings, and skin contact) require significant use of human resources. This project studies the technical feasibility of a stochastic vibrotactile stimulation (SVS) technology incorporated into the hospital bassinet pad, which provides gentle vibrating sensory stimulation to soothe infants with NAS. Building on preliminary evidence that this type of stimulation calms NAS infants without altering their sleep, this study aims to develop a commercially viable bassinet pad that could be used in a hospital setting.

4UH3NS123964-02
Disease Modifying Analgesia with CA8 Gene Therapy Preclinical and Translational Research in Pain Management Development and Optimization of Non-Addictive Therapies to Treat Pain NINDS UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI SCHOOL OF MEDICINE LEVITT, ROY C Coral Gables, FL 2023
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Non-addictive Analgesic Therapeutics Development [Small Molecules and Biologics] to Treat Pain (UG3/UH3 Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: RFA-NS-21-010
1UG3NS123964-01
Disease Modifying Analgesia with CA8 Gene Therapy Preclinical and Translational Research in Pain Management Development and Optimization of Non-Addictive Therapies to Treat Pain NINDS UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI SCHOOL OF MEDICINE LEVITT, ROY C Coral Gables, FL 2021
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Non-addictive Analgesic Therapeutics Development [Small Molecules and Biologics] to Treat Pain (UG3/UH3 Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: RFA-NS-21-010
Summary:

Efforts to identify non-opioid analgesics for treatment of chronic pain have identified a protein, carbonic anhydrase-8 (CA8), in pain-sensing nerve cells in the spinal cord (dorsal root ganglion cells) whose expression regulates analgesic responses. Gene therapy delivering CA8 to dorsal root ganglion cells through clinically relevant routes of administration functions as a “local anesthetic” that induces long-lasting pain relief in animal models of chronic pain. This project will further develop CA8 gene therapy with the goal of treating chronic knee osteoarthritis pain. It will assess several gene therapy constructs to determine the doses needed, safety, efficacy, and specificity to nerve cells for each construct. It will then select the safest and most effective construct that can be administered via the least invasive route for further development. The project will include all steps necessary to identify one candidate gene therapy construct that will be suitable to begin clinical trials in patients with chronic knee osteoarthritis pain.

3UG1DA013720-19S3
Individual Level Predictive Modeling of Opioid Use Disorder Treatment Outcome Translation of Research to Practice for the Treatment of Opioid Addiction Enhancing the National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network to Address Opioids NIDA UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI SCHOOL OF MEDICINE SZAPOCZNIK, JOSE; FEASTER, DANIEL J CORAL GABLES, FL 2019
NOFO Title: Administrative Supplements to Existing NIH Grants and Cooperative Agreements (Parent Admin Supp Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: PA-18-591
Summary:

A persistent problem in the dissemination of medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD) is patient dropout, and matching patients to suitable medication early has the potential to minimize dropout. The overall objective of this secondary data analysis study is to develop and disseminate individual level risk prediction models using harmonized data collected from three multi-site clinical trials from the CTN, in order to predict specific clinical outcomes (e.g., dropout, relapse) for patients treated with MOUD, including methadone, buprenorphine or extended-release depot naltrexone. The relative importance of predictors in the best predictive models will be estimated, which may facilitate refinement of common data elements for future OUD studies. The comprehensive, harmonized database of treatment data created in this study can be used for future secondary data analysis studies and will provide a replicable data pipeline to process and validate OUD data in future protocols.

3UG1DA013720-20S2
Medication treatment for Opioid-dependent expecting Mothers (MOMs): A Pragmatic Randomized Trial Comparing Extended-Release and Daily Buprenorphine Formulations (CTN-0080) Translation of Research to Practice for the Treatment of Opioid Addiction Enhancing the National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network to Address Opioids NIDA UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI SCHOOL OF MEDICINE SZAPOCZNIK, JOSE; FEASTER, DANIEL J CORAL GABLES, FL 2019
NOFO Title: Administrative Supplements to Existing NIH Grants and Cooperative Agreements (Parent Admin Supp Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: PA-18-591
Summary:

The growing opioid use epidemic in the U.S. has been associated with a significant increase in the prevalence of pregnant opioid-dependent women and neonatal abstinence syndrome, which is associated with adverse health effects for the infant and with costly hospitalizations. Maintenance with sublingual (SL) buprenorphine (BUP) is efficacious for opioid use disorder but has disadvantages that may be heightened in pregnant women, including the potential for poor adherence, treatment dropout, and negative maternal/fetal effects associated with daily BUP peak-trough cycles. Extended release (XR) formulations may address some of these disadvantages. The primary objective of CTN-0080 is to evaluate the impact of treating opioid use disorder in pregnant women (n = 300) with BUP-XR, compared to BUP-SL, on maternal-infant outcomes. Other objectives include testing a conceptual model of the mechanisms by which BUP-XR may improve maternal-infant outcomes, relative to BUP-SL; determining the economic value of BUP-XR, compared with BUP-SL, to treat OUD in pregnant women; and evaluating the impact of BUP-XR, relative to BUP-SL, on neurodevelopment when the infant/child is approximately 12 and 24 months of age. Ultimately, this study will help in increasing access to treatment as well as provide quality care for pregnant/postpartum women.

3UG1DA013720-20S3
Individual Level Predictive Modeling of Opioid Use Disorder Treatment Outcome Translation of Research to Practice for the Treatment of Opioid Addiction Enhancing the National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network to Address Opioids NIDA UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI SCHOOL OF MEDICINE SZAPOCZNIK, JOSE; FEASTER, DANIEL J CORAL GABLES, FL 2019
NOFO Title: Administrative Supplements to Existing NIH Grants and Cooperative Agreements (Parent Admin Supp Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: PA-18-591
Summary:

A persistent problem in the dissemination of medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD) is patient dropout, and matching patients to suitable medication early has the potential to minimize dropout. The overall objective of this secondary data analysis study is to develop and disseminate individual level risk prediction models using harmonized data collected from three multi-site clinical trials from the CTN, in order to predict specific clinical outcomes (e.g., dropout, relapse) for patients treated with MOUD, including methadone, buprenorphine or extended-release depot naltrexone. The relative importance of predictors in the best predictive models will be estimated, which may facilitate refinement of common data elements for future OUD studies. The comprehensive, harmonized database of treatment data created in this study can be used for future secondary data analysis studies and will provide a replicable data pipeline to process and validate OUD data in future protocols.

3UG1DA020024-14S2
Innovatively Increasing PCP Prescribing of Buprenorphine: Measurement Based Care and Integrated Electronic Solution Translation of Research to Practice for the Treatment of Opioid Addiction Enhancing the National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network to Address Opioids NIDA University of Texas Southwestern Medical School TRIVEDI, MADHUKAR H. DALLAS, TX 2019
NOFO Title: Administrative Supplements to Existing NIH Grants and Cooperative Agreements (Parent Admin Supp Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: PA-18-591
Summary:

This training and dissemination project will develop an office-based buprenorphine treatment module for primary care, including the algorithm for buprenorphine treatment and integration of OUD measures; assess the acceptability of the OUD module; evaluate the impact of the OUD module on screening and identification rates of problem opioid use and successful initiation and maintenance rates of buprenorphine in primary care; assess barriers to implementation of buprenorphine treatment and methods for overcoming these barriers in the network partner clinics; and develop a strategy to refine and more broadly implement opioid problem use and OUD treatment.

1UG3TR003149-01
hiPSC-based DRG Tissue Mimics on Multi-well Microelectrode Arrays as a Tissue Chip Model of Acute and Chronic Nociception Preclinical and Translational Research in Pain Management Translational Research to Advance Testing of Novel Drugs and Human Cell-Based Screening Platforms to Treat Pain and Opioid Use Disorder NCATS UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS DALLAS BLACK, BRYAN JAMES Dallas, TX 2019
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Tissue Chips to Model Nociception, Addiction, and Overdose (UG3/UH3 Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: RFA-TR-19-003
Summary:

Researchers will develop an innovative three-dimensional (3D) model of acute and chronic nociception using human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC) sensory neurons and satellite glial cell surrogates. They will develop a tissue chip for modeling acute and chronic nociception based on 3D hiPSC-based dorsal root ganglion tissue mimics and a high-content, moderate-throughput microelectrode array. Researchers will demonstrate stable spontaneous and noxious stimulus-evoked behavior in response to thermal, chemical, and electrical stimulation challenges. They aim to demonstrate sensitivity to translational control via ligand receptor interactions between neuronal and non-neuronal cell types. They also will demonstrate the quantitative efficiency and preclinical efficacy of our system by detecting known ligand-based modulators of translational control and voltage-gated ion channel antagonists in a sensitized model of chronic nociception. Researchers will leverage the high-throughput nature of our tissue chip model to screen Food and Drug Administration–approved bioactive compounds.

3UG3TR003149-02S1
Supplement to hiPSC-based DRG Tissue Mimics on Multi-well Microelectrode Arrays as a Tissue Chip Model of Acute and Chronic Nociception Preclinical and Translational Research in Pain Management Discovery and Validation of Novel Targets for Safe and Effective Treatment of Pain NCATS UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS DALLAS BLACK, BRYAN JAMES Dallas, TX 2020
NOFO Title: Notice of Special Interest for HEAL Initiative: Request for Administrative Supplements to Existing Grants for Identification and Validation of New Pain and Opioid Use Disorder Targets within the Understudied Druggable Genome
NOFO Number: NOT-TR-20-008
Summary:

This study aims to determine whether a subset of understudied genes that are expressed in human and mouse dorsal root ganglia (DRG) tissues (critical for relaying the sensation of pain from the body to the central nervous system), are also expressed in human induced pluripotent stem cell DRG mimetics. The study will also determine if these genes are involved in neuronal excitability changes under inflammatory conditions and compare these responses to those of primary DRG neurons. Third and finally, the study will optimize genetic depletion of target genes enabling future fundamental and preclinical research studies.

1R21AG082344-01
Using Secondary Analyses to Test Novel Pathways Linking Family Stress and Pain Incidence and Persistence Among African Americans Cross-Cutting Research Leveraging Existing and Real-Time Opioid and Pain Management Data NIA UT SOUTHWESTERN MEDICAL CENTER WOODS, SARAH B Dallas, TX 2022
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Secondary Analysis and Integration of Existing Data Related to Acute and Chronic Pain Development or Managementin Humans (R21 Clinical Trials Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: RFA-DE-22-011
Summary:

Chronic pain is a persistent source of disability and reduced quality of life for aging adults. Chronic pain-related outcomes are disproportionately worse for aging African Americans, who report greater pain severity and worse pain-related disability compared to White peers. A significant pain risk factor for African Americans is chronic stress (including family-related stress), which is worsened by structural inequities that affect this population. Although many African Americans identify family support as critical for pain self-management, this influence has not been studied thoroughly. This project will study how pain conditions develop and persist for aging African Americans by analyzing existing data from African American participants in two large aging studies: Midlife in the U.S. (721 participants) and the Health and Retirement Study (2,698 participants). The research aims to determine how family emotional climate affects pain risk, taking into account structural factors like discrimination, socioeconomic disparity, and the influence of various neighborhood settings.

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.