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) Year Awarded
3UF1MH121954-01S1
Improving Access and Treatment for Co-occurring Opioid Use Disorders and Mental Illness New Strategies to Prevent and Treat Opioid Addiction Optimizing Care for People with Opioid Use Disorder and Mental Health Conditions NIMH RAND CORPORATION WATKINS, KATHERINE E (contact); KOMAROMY, MIRIAM Santa Monica, CA 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:

The United States is in the middle of two intertwined epidemics. Suicide and overdose deaths are at record levels. Opioid use disorder and mental illness are major contributors to both, with the highest death rates seen in people with co-occurring disorders (COD). This competitive revision tests whether enhancements to the collaborative care (CC) model adapted for co-occurring disorders improves retention in medication treatment and decreases suicide and overdose risk. The three additional components include: (1) education of family members about addiction and medication treatment; (2) training for family members to administer naloxone and on how to reduce opioid risk behaviors, and (3) implementation of Caring Contacts, a suicide prevention intervention. This study will examine patient and family member attitudes toward overdose education and naloxone in the population with COD; examine and then intervene with family members around patients? use of medication; and test in the COD population the effectiveness of universal suicide and overdose prevention programs.


Adjuvanted Opioid Vaccine for Treating Fentanyl Use Disorder to Reduce Poisoning and Fatal Overdose Novel Therapeutic Options for Opioid Use Disorder and Overdose Development of Novel Immunotherapeutics for Opioid Addiction NIAID University of Montana Jay Evans Missoula, Montana 2020
NOFO Title: Development of Vaccines for the Treatment of Opioid Use Disorder
NOFO Number: BAA-DAIT-75N93019R00009
Summary:

High rates of relapse and overdose deaths pose significant challenges to the treatment of Opioid Use Disorder (OUD). Anti-opioid immunotherapies (i.e., vaccines and monoclonal antibodies) have great potential to reduce long-term opioid use and overdose, with minimal risk of side effects, when used in conjunction with pharmacological treatments and/or behavioral therapies. The ability of an anti-opioid vaccine to induce antibodies that render an opioid less effective, or less rewarding, and protect from accidental overdose could provide an important therapeutic option for patients undergoing treatment for OUD. The goal of this collaborative study is to design, develop, and evaluate vaccines for use in the treatment of opioid use disorder

3R61AT010800-02S1
OUD Stigma Mechanisms in the Context of Buprenorphine Treatment Translation of Research to Practice for the Treatment of Opioid Addiction Behavioral Research to Improve Medication-Based Treatment NCCIH UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES GLASNER-EDWARDS, SUZETTE V Los Angeles, CA 2020
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Notice of Special Interest (NOSI) regarding the Availability of Administrative Supplements to Support Strategies to Reduce Stigma in Pain Management and Opioid Use Disorder (OUD) and Treatment
NOFO Number: NOT-OD-20-101
Summary:

Buprenorphine has been shown to be is an effective method for treating Opioid Use Disorder (OUD). However, despite its success, treatment retention rates are notoriously low ? about half of those seeking treatment will have dropped out within the first 6 months. One factor known to negatively impact treatment adherence is stigma. This stigma derives from not only being viewed as individuals with OUD, but even as individuals seeking medications for OUD as these medications often include other forms of opioids. Additionally, individuals with OUD often suffer from other conditions, including psychiatric illness, leading them to live with multiple stigmatized identities. This study will develop tools to assess stigma associated with OUD, seeking medical treatment for OUD, and mental health. This knowledge will then be used to adapt the parent award?s mobile Health intervention intended to overcome stigma barriers and increase adherence to buprenorphine treatment for OUD.

3R61DA049382-02S2
The moderation effect of social support networks on the relationship between opioid use and suicide attempts among Native American youth in New Mexico New Strategies to Prevent and Treat Opioid Addiction Preventing Opioid Use Disorder NIDA UNIVERSITY OF UTAH QEADAN, FARES Salt Lake City, UT 2020
NOFO Title: Notice of Special Interest(NOSI): HEAL Initiative: Social Network Analyses to Reduce American Indian and Alaska Native Opioid Use Disorder and Related Risks for Suicide and Mental Health Disorders
NOFO Number: NOT-DA-20-033
Summary:

Fatal opioid overdose rates are higher among American Indian/Alaska Native populations than among Hispanics, African Americans, and Asian Americans, and are just below non-Hispanic Whites. AI/AN opioid overdose rates vary significantly by state and county; however, tribe-level differences are difficult to ascertain due to decentralized data systems that divide state health data and Indian Health Service data. This study will conduct a two-phase research project that leverages Center for Disease Control funding awarded to the Albuquerque Area Southwest Tribal Epidemiology Center for improving data quality in opioid overdose surveillance in New Mexico. In the first phase, geocoding and data linkages will be studied to address the need in New Mexico for tribe-specific data and analyses on opioid use disorder and opioid overdose. After disseminating analyses to tribal communities and Indian Health Service, Tribal and Urban Indian health facilities, the second phase of the study will establish a collaboration with interested tribes and facilities in a community-based participatory intervention research project to develop and test a culturally centered implementation program for providing medication for opioid use disorders to American Indian people.

3PL1HD101059-01S1
Supplement to increase the sample size of the Outcomes of Babies with Opioid Exposure (OBOE) study cohort. Enhanced Outcomes for Infants and Children Exposed to Opioids Advancing Clinical Trials in Neonatal Opioid Withdrawal (ACT NOW) NICHD Research Triangle Institute Bann, Carla Research Triangle Park, NC 2020
NOFO Number: PA-18-591
Summary:

Neonatal opioid withdrawal syndrome (NOWS) has emerged as a tragic by-product of the opioid epidemic. Newborns whose mothers used opioids while pregnant can experience symptoms of opioid withdrawal in the days following birth, such as tremors, irritability, seizures, sleep, digestive, and feeding problems. However, little is known about the effect of antenatal opioid exposure on longer-term infant development over time. To address this gap in understanding, the ACT NOW Longitudinal study is examining a crucial developmental period from birth to two years of life through a comprehensive battery of assessments, including MRI imaging, neurodevelopmental behavioral assessments, and family report measures. This longitudinal cohort study is projected to include a total of 375 infants, 250 who were exposed to opioids and 125 matched controls.

1UG3DA050923-01
AMPA Antagonism: A Novel Pharmacology for Launching Recovery from Opioid Addiction Novel Therapeutic Options for Opioid Use Disorder and Overdose Focusing Medication Development to Prevent and Treat Opioid Use Disorder and Overdose NIDA INDIANA UNIV-PURDUE UNIV AT INDIANAPOLIS Chambers, Robert Indianapolis, IN 2020
NOFO Title: Development of Medications to Prevent and Treat Opioid Use Disorders and Overdose (UG3/UH3) (Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-19-002
Summary:

The excruciating multiday experience of opioid withdrawal syndrome (OWS), is exacerbated by the opioid antagonist drugs naloxone and naltrexone. This industry-academia collaboration will explore the potential of the glutamate AMPA receptor antagonist Tezampanel (TZP). Animal studies have shown reduced hyperactivity in brain circuits involved in OWS, without relying on direct stimulation or antagonism of the opioid system ,and has already been delivered to over 500 human subjects and found to be safe for a potential migraine indication. This proposal will build up the evidence needed to apply for and conduct open label and blinded placebo-controlled human trials of TZP safety and efficacy for OWS. If successful, this project will allow planning for a pivotal registration trial for TZP for OWS, and as a transitional treatment to long-term recovery on naltrexone and help us stem the tide of the opioid crisis.

1R24DA051975-01
Innovations in Recovery through Infrastructure Support (IRIS) Translation of Research to Practice for the Treatment of Opioid Addiction Recovery Research Networks NIDA UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND BALTIMORE UNICK, GEORGE J Baltimore, MD 2020
NOFO Title: Research Networks for the Study of Recovery Support Services for Persons Treated with Medications for Opioid Use Disorder (R24 Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-20-014
Summary:

The opioid epidemic in the United States is associated with alarming rates of overdose and overdose deaths. Medication Assisted Treatment (MAT), in combination with psychosocial intervention, is the most effective treatment for OUD; however, many individuals are unable to access treatment, are not sufficiently retained in treatment, or experience barriers that prohibit their participation in treatment. A multipronged approach is needed that includes 1) development of integrated networks of care, both formal and informal, to better address the needs of individuals with OUDs and 2) measures of the efficacy of these integrated networks for addressing the needs of individuals with OUD. This project will build a learning collaborative to address gaps in knowledge about the delivery, sustainability, and assessment of recovery service for individuals on MAT. The collaborative will foster collaboration and communication between stakeholders and with the larger community of research and providers interested in improving the delivery of OUD recovery support services. This community-academic partnership will address the lack of evidence regarding effective recovery support services.

3UG1DA049436-02S2
Developing an intervention to address intersecting prescription opioid and chronic pain stigma in cancer survivors 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 PITTSBURGH AT PITTSBURGH LIEBSCHUTZ, JANE M. Pittsburgh, PA 2020
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Notice of Special Interest (NOSI) regarding the Availability of Administrative Supplements to Support Strategies to Reduce Stigma in Pain Management and Opioid Use Disorder (OUD) and Treatment
NOFO Number: NOT-OD-20-101
Summary:

While advances in cancer treatment have increased survival rates, these patients often suffer from chronic cancer pain. Prescription opioids are often prescribed during active cancer treatment, but their long-term use for chronic cancer pain is associated with risk for opioid use disorder and risk for stigmatization associated with emotional distress, suboptimal health behaviors and coping strategies, and difficult patient-provider communication. This study aims to conduct qualitative interviews exploring prescription opioid and chronic pain stigma in cancer survivors with moderate-to-severe pain, caregivers, and clinicians who treat patients with chronic cancer pain, including oncologists, primary care providers, pain management specialists, and palliative care physicians. An analysis of potential contributors to stigma in cancer survivors will be completed to support development of multi-level behavioral interventions to reduce stigma and explore long-term health outcomes from such interventions.

3U19MH121738-02S2
Buprenorphine Effect on Suicidal Behavior New Strategies to Prevent and Treat Opioid Addiction Optimizing Care for People with Opioid Use Disorder and Mental Health Conditions NIMH KAISER FOUNDATION RESEARCH INSTITUTE SIMON, GREGORY E Oakland, CA 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:

Mortality and morbidity related to suicidal behavior and opioid use disorder (OUD) have increased significantly over the past decade. These two public health crises are intertwined at multiple levels. Medications for OUD, especially buprenorphine, have been shown to decrease opioid use and reduce the multiple negative consequences of OUD, including fatal and nonfatal overdose, criminal justice involvement, infectious complications, and misuse of other substances. In addition, small randomized trials of buprenorphine treatment in treatment-resistant depression (with or without co-occurring OUD) suggest that buprenorphine reduces depressive symptoms and suicidal ideation. This large study will evaluate the effects of starting buprenorphine treatment on self-harm and suicide attempt among people with opioid use disorder, including those with and without co-occurring mental health conditions or other known risk factors for suicidal behavior. Comprehensive health records data from four large health systems serving a combined member/patient population of approximately 11 million will be examined for the overall effect of buprenorphine treatment on subsequent self-harm or suicide attempt, including differences in effects between patient subgroups and specificity of effects to buprenorphine vs other medications.

1UG3DA051392-01
Evaluation of the Safety and Efficacy of a New Oral Small Molecule GABA-B Receptor Positive Allosteric Modulator (PAM) as an Add-on Maintenance Therapy for Opioid Use Disorder (OUD) Novel Therapeutic Options for Opioid Use Disorder and Overdose Focusing Medication Development to Prevent and Treat Opioid Use Disorder and Overdose NIDA ASTELLAS PHARMA GLOBAL DEVELOPMENT, INC. Blahunka, Paul NORTHBROOK, IL 2020
NOFO Title:
NOFO Number: DA19-002
1U01DA051071-01A1
Process Development, Manufacturing, and Preclinical Evaluation of a Monoclonal Antibody for Fentanyl Overdose Novel Therapeutic Options for Opioid Use Disorder and Overdose Focusing Medication Development to Prevent and Treat Opioid Use Disorder and Overdose NIDA CESSATION THERAPEUTICS, LLC Bremer, Paul T. San Jose, CA 2020
NOFO Title: Grand Opportunity in Medications Development for Substance-Use Disorders (U01 - Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: PAR-19-327
Summary:

Opioid use disorder (OUD) is a significant public health problem in the United States. Particularly troubling is the rapid evolution of an opioid epidemic within the past decade, characterized by a surge in unintentional overdose deaths involving synthetic opioids, such as fentanyl. The current standard of care for opioid overdose is reversal with opioid antagonist naloxone. Naloxone is effective at reversing overdose from prescription opioids and heroin, but less effective when combating fentanyl, due to fentanyl?s high potency. Therapeutic monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against fentanyl could overcome this problem by specifically preventing the drug from entering the central nervous system, averting overdose and attenuating opioid-induced respiratory depression. This study will develop and design of laboratory protocols needed to establish a Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) process, quality assurance protocol, and stability profile for a new human mAb against fentanyl. Subsequent production of current GMP material will enable Good Laboratory Practice (GLP) toxicology studies in rats and dogs and eventually a Phase I/IIa clinical trial. This material will also be used in final opioid-induced respiratory depression studies in mice and non-human primates to confirm therapeutic efficacy of final drug product. If successful, these activities will enable filing for an investigational new drug application for this mAb candidate with the FDA.

3R61AT010604-01S1
Behavioral Economics based stigma reduction intervention for low income, African American individuals with OUD Translation of Research to Practice for the Treatment of Opioid Addiction Behavioral Research to Improve Medication-Based Treatment NCCIH UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE HEALTH SCI CTR DEREFINKO, KAREN J Memphis, TN 2020
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Notice of Special Interest (NOSI) regarding the Availability of Administrative Supplements to Support Strategies to Reduce Stigma in Pain Management and Opioid Use Disorder (OUD) and Treatment
NOFO Number: NOT-OD-20-101
Summary:

Buprenorphine-naloxone is known to work for the treatment of Opioid Use Disorder (OUD). However, despite its success in treating OUD, retention for these kinds of medication-assisted treatments (MATs) for OUD is notoriously low, having a dropout rate of approximately 50 percent within the first 6 months. One factor known to negatively impact a person?s adherence to treatment is stigma. This includes, not only stigma associated with having OUD, but also that of multiple stigmatized identities, including stigma associated with race. The goal of this supplement award is to decrease OUD- and race-related stigma in low income African American communities using a Behavioral Economics Stigma Reduction intervention that functions at the intrapersonal, interpersonal, and community levels. The investigators will work at the individual level to address stigma in untreated individuals who present with OUD at local community or faith organizations through stigma reduction counseling and tangible rewards for treatment uptake. To assess the interpersonal stigma, referred family members or support persons of these individuals will also be enrolled to receive stigma reduction and supportive skills counseling. Finally, a stigma reduction campaign will be developed and administered to the community via social media and billboards. Community members? substance use stigma will be compared before and after the campaign.

3R01MH115840-02S1
Social Networks among Native American caregivers participating in an evidence-based and culturally informed intergenerational intervention New Strategies to Prevent and Treat Opioid Addiction Preventing Opioid Use Disorder NIMH JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY BROCKIE, TERESA Baltimore, MD 2020
NOFO Title: Notice of Special Interest(NOSI): HEAL Initiative: Social Network Analyses to Reduce American Indian and Alaska Native Opioid Use Disorder and Related Risks for Suicide and Mental Health Disorders
NOFO Number: NOT-DA-20-033
Summary:

American Native (AN) communities experience high rates of trauma that compromise the mental health of parents and caregivers that in turn increases their children?s risk for suicide and substance use during adolescence and young adulthood. Without intervention, this intergenerational cycle may repeat. The goal of this study is to understand opioid use, suicide, and the social network characteristics of Fort Peck Assiniboine and Sioux parents and caregivers to determine how the social network of parents/adult caregivers are related to both risk for and protection from suicide and opioid use. This supplement will examine the effectiveness of a community health worker delivered, culturally tailored prevention intervention called Wa?Kan Ye?Zah on caregiver and child behavioral and mental health outcomes and assess the benefits of culturally enhancing the intervention for caregivers? well-being.

3R01MH112148-03S1
Improving the Identification and Management of Suicide Risk among Patients Using Prescription Opioids New Strategies to Prevent and Treat Opioid Addiction Optimizing Care for People with Opioid Use Disorder and Mental Health Conditions NIMH UNIVERSITY OF CONNECTICUT SCH OF MED/DNT ASELTINE, ROBERT H Farmington, CT 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:

The project will address gaps in both risk identification and clinical management by utilizing comprehensive clinical data from a mature health information exchange containing more than 2.3 million patients across the spectrum of clinical care (hospitals, primary care, specialty care, community health centers, urgent care) to develop a statistically robust method to measure suicide risk associated with prescription opioid use. First, the team will couple data fusion techniques with machine learning-based approaches in identifying the clinical and demographic characteristics associated with elevated risk of suicidal behavior among prescription opioid users. Second, the team will develop clinical profiles of patients with higher risk of suicidal behavior associated with prescription opioids, and to incorporate these profiles in a clinical decision support platform that can be used for identification and intervention at the point of care. The clinical decision support tool developed under this proposal will provide a generalizable platform that could be extended to other more conventional opioid related outcomes such as OUD and overdose.

3U01MH114087-02S2
EVALUATING THE IMPACT OF CHANGES IN OPIOID PRESCRIBING ACROSS HEALTH SYSTEMS IMPLEMENTING ZERO SUICIDE New Strategies to Prevent and Treat Opioid Addiction Sleep Dysfunction as a Core Feature of Opioid Use Disorder and Recovery NIMH Henry Ford Health System AHMEDANI, BRIAN KENNETH; SIMON, GREGORY E. DETROIT, MI 2018
NOFO Title: Administrative Supplements to Existing NIH Grants and Cooperative Agreements (Parent Admin Supp Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: PA-18-591
Summary:

This supplement supports the goals of the current award, “An Evaluation of the National Zero Suicide Model Across Learning Healthcare Systems” (U01MH114087). Safety planning is a highly recommended practice within the Zero Suicide framework, but little is known about the effectiveness of the individual elements that can make up a safety plan, such as lethal means assessment, identification of supportive contacts, coping skills, warning signs, and sources of distraction. All of the documentation lives in text-based clinical narratives. This supplement will support development of new metrics using natural language processing to determine baseline rates, from which we can quantify the change in safety planning and lethal means assessment practice longitudinally after implementation of new safety planning templates using our Zero Suicide main award.

1PL1HD101059-01
HEAL Initiative: Antenatal Opioid Exposure Longitudinal Study Consortium Enhanced Outcomes for Infants and Children Exposed to Opioids Advancing Clinical Trials in Neonatal Opioid Withdrawal (ACT NOW) NICHD RESEARCH TRIANGLE INSTITUTE BANN, CARLA M Research Triangle Park, NC 2019
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Antenatal Opioid Exposure Longitudinal Study Consortium (PL1 Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: RFA-HD-19-025
Summary:

The incidence of Neonatal Opioid Withdrawal Syndrome (NOWS) in the United States has increased more than fivefold since 2004 to almost 7 per 1,000 hospital births. It is unknown how these effects are modulated by associated maternal, neonatal, and environmental factors and how the environment, maternal health, and parenting styles modify trajectories of brain connectivity and neurodevelopment. This study leverages the established infrastructure and longstanding collaborations of four clinical sites and the data coordinating center of the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Neonatal Research Network to address current critical knowledge gaps in childhood brain structure and connectivity and on medical, developmental, and behavioral trajectories in early childhood. The study will analyze a well-characterized observational cohort using clinical and neuroimaging measures to improve understanding of the structural and functional sequelae resulting from prenatal opioid exposure and NOWS and their interactions with the maternal-infant dyad.

1R44DA049631-01
Addressing Opioid Use Disorder with an External Multimodal Neuromodulation Device: Development and Clinical Evaluation of DuoTherm for Opioid-Sparing in Acute and Chronic Low Back Pain. Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NIDA MMJ LABS, LLC BAXTER, AMY LYNN Atlanta, GA 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:

Acute and chronic low back pain are among the most common sources of short- and long-term disability. Fear of pain and disability, or “catastrophizing,” increases opioid use, but is reduced when patients have effective options and feel control over pain. The goal of this project is to develop an opioid-sparing therapeutic consumer device for low back pain, with multiple patient-controlled effective neuromodulatory pain relief options, including vibration, pressure, cold, and heat. After proving that providing a multimodal device is effective for pain, the project will determine whether the availability of an effective home therapy device reduces opioid use for patients with acute and chronic low back pain.

1UG3DA047720-01
Evaluation of safety and pharmacokinetics of naltrexone implant Novel Therapeutic Options for Opioid Use Disorder and Overdose Focusing Medication Development to Prevent and Treat Opioid Use Disorder and Overdose NIDA NEW YORK STATE PSYCHIATRIC INSTITUTE BISAGA, ADAM; NUNES, EDWARD V. New York, NY 2019
NOFO Title: Development of Medications to Prevent and Treat Opioid Use Disorders and Overdose (UG3/UH3) (Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-19-002
Summary:

New medication treatment approaches are needed to help address the severe epidemic of opioid use disorder (OUD) and opioid overdose deaths in the U.S. Currently available medications, such as methadone, buprenorphine, and extended release injection naltrexone (XR-NTX; trade name: Vivitrol), are highly efficacious, but their effectiveness in practice is limited by poor adherence, with many patients stopping treatment prematurely and relapsing. The goal of this proposal is to develop an innovative long-acting subcutaneous implanted formulation of naltrexone, the O’Neil Long-Acting Naltrexone Implant (OLANI), toward FDA approval. Expected to produce naltrexone blood levels sufficient to block the effects of opioids for 6 months after implant, OLANI circumvents the need for adherence to monthly injections with XR-NTX and could represent an important new addition to the medical armamentarium for treatment of OUD.

3UG1DA013727-20S3
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 MEDICAL UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA BRADY, KATHLEEN T.; CARPENTER, MATTHEW J Charleston, SC 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.

3UG1DA040314-04S7
Primary Care Opioid Use Disorders Treatment Trial (PROUD) Economic Analysis Study Translation of Research to Practice for the Treatment of Opioid Addiction Enhancing the National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network to Address Opioids NIDA KAISER FOUNDATION RESEARCH INSTITUTE CAMPBELL, CYNTHIA I; BRADLEY, KATHARINE ANTHONY Oakland, CA 2019
NOFO Title: The National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network (UG1)
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-15-008
Summary:

Effective treatment for OUD has been shown to improve patient outcomes and reduce health care costs; however, evidence of this effect in primary care settings is severely limited. The health economic findings from this study will supplement the parent PROUD trial’s results regarding clinical effectiveness and implementation outcomes and provide critical contextual information for health systems and other health care stakeholders. The study will evaluate the economic viability of the PROUD collaborative care model for OUD—that is, from the perspective of the health care sector, to what extent do the downstream cost savings associated with improved patient outcomes offset the additional costs of the PROUD intervention? The specific aims are to (1) estimate the start-up and ongoing management costs of the PROUD intervention, (2) assess costs associated with health care utilization for patients who receive primary care treatment in PROUD and usual care clinics and have been identified with recognized OUDs before clinic randomization, and (3) estimate the economic value of the PROUD intervention, measured as net monetary benefit (NMB, incremental benefit minus incremental cost), from the health care sector perspective.

1R01HD096796-01
PHARMACOLOGICALLY-BASED STRATEGIES FOR BUPRENORPHINE TREATMENT DURING PREGNANCY Enhanced Outcomes for Infants and Children Exposed to Opioids NICHD Magee-Women's Research Institute and Foundation CARITIS, STEVE N Pittsburgh, PA 2018
NOFO Title: Opioid Use Disorder in Pregnancy (R01)
NOFO Number: RFA-HD-18-036
Summary:

This study will challenge current clinical approaches to managing the pregnant woman with opioid use disorder. Dosing of buprenorphine (BUP) in pregnant women is based on studies in non-pregnant subjects, which suggests that symptoms of withdrawal occur when plasma BUP concentrations are < 1ng/ml. No such data exist for pregnant women, but this is a prerequisite for defining an appropriate dosing regimen of BUP in pregnant women. We will define this threshold by monitoring women undergoing mild, medically directed withdrawal. The Clinical Opioid Withdrawal Scale score and the Finnegan score for NAS are key to defining when withdrawal occurs and thus dictate treatment in mother and baby. Neither scoring system is based on plasma BUP concentrations and thus, may not reflect true opioid withdrawal. This proposal aims to develop physiologic-based scoring systems that refine the accuracy of diagnosis and optimize treatment.

4R33AT010109-02
Mindfulness Oriented Recovery Enhancement as an Adjunct to Methadone Treatment for Opioid Use and Chronic Pain Management Translation of Research to Practice for the Treatment of Opioid Addiction Behavioral Research to Improve Medication-Based Treatment NCCIH RBHS-ROBERT WOOD JOHNSON MEDICAL SCHOOL COOPERMAN, NINA Piscataway, NJ 2019
NOFO Title: Clinical Trials or Observational Studies of Behavioral Interventions for Prevention of Opioid Use Disorder or Adjunct to Medication Assisted Treatment-SAMHSA Opioid STR Grants (R21/R33)
NOFO Number: RFA-AT-18-002
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.

1UG3DA050322-01
Preclinical and clinical evaluation of the NMDA modulator NYX-783 for OUD Novel Therapeutic Options for Opioid Use Disorder and Overdose Focusing Medication Development to Prevent and Treat Opioid Use Disorder and Overdose NIDA Yale University DiLeone, Ralph New Haven, CT 2019
NOFO Title: Development of Medications to Prevent and Treat Opioid Use Disorders and Overdose (UG3/UH3) (Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: RFA-DA-19-002
Summary:

This study will conduct preclinical and clinical assessments of the NMDA modulator NYX-783 for treatment of opioid drug-seeking and relapse to opioid use disorder (OUD). NYX-783, a novel small molecule being developed by Aptinyx, has shown evidence of safety/tolerability in Phase 1 studies and is currently in Phase 2 trials for post-traumatic stress disorder. This project will test the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics (PK) of NYX-718 in morphine-maintained patients in residential settings and then conduct a combined inpatient (safety/tolerability/PK) / outpatient (preliminary efficacy) study testing NYX-783’s effects on opioid use and relapse, stress/cue reactivity, craving, and quality of life in OUD subjects maintained on standard extended release naltrexone over a 10-week period. Successful completion of these studies will set the stage for larger scale Phase 2/3 studies of efficacy in OUD that will ultimately be required for FDA approval of NYX-783 for the treatment of drug-seeking and relapse in OUD.

1K01DA044279-01A1
PREVENTING SUBSTANCE USE AMONG YOUTH: BEHAVIORAL AND ECONOMIC IMPACT OF ENHANCED IMPLEMENTATION STRATEGIES FOR COMMUNITIES New Strategies to Prevent and Treat Opioid Addiction Preventing Opioid Use Disorder NIDA University of Michigan Ann Arbor EISMAN, ANDRIA B Ann Arbor, MI 2019
NOFO Title: Mentored Research Scientist Development Award (Parent K01)
NOFO Number: PA-16-190
Summary:

Quality implementation of evidence-based programs (EBPs) in community settings for youth is critical for reducing the burden of alcohol, tobacco and other drug (ATOD) use and its consequences. EBPs delivered in schools are an efficient way to reach large populations of young people, including those underserved by other settings, and reduce and prevent ATOD use. Yet youth rarely receive EBPs as intended in community settings, including schools. This training and research plan will prepare the investigator to become an independent scholar in the implementation of theories and frameworks to better understand factors related to program delivery—approaches to enhancing ATOD programs for youth in community settings. More specifically, the training will allow him to expand the application of Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) to inform approaches to enhancing effective EBP delivery. The proposed training and research plan extends current implementation research to focus applying implementation theories, frameworks and strategies in other community settings (schools) and on economic evaluation of implementation strategies. The results are expected to improve current efforts to deliver EBPs in diverse community settings and aid in applying evidence-based implementation strategies in the school context to ultimately reduce and prevent ATOD use among youth.