Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00713583

Carbidopa/Levodopa Combined With Behavioral Therapy for the Treatment of Cocaine Dependence

Contingency Management Plus Levodopa/Carbidopa for Treatment of Cocaine Dependence

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
85 (actual)
Sponsor
The University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 60 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Cocaine dependence is a major public health problem and the development of a treatment for this disorder is a priority. To date, treatment interventions based on positive incentive principles have shown the strongest effects for improving substance use outcomes. One such example is contingency management (CM) interventions in which nondrug rewards are used to compete with cocaine. Recent evidence suggests that certain medications improve response to CM interventions, particularly agents that target dopamine reward systems in the brain. A promising dopamine-enhancing medication is levodopa. The study team has observed the strongest effects of levodopa when the medication is administered in the context of CM therapy, perhaps through mechanisms that enhance reward saliency. The proposed study is designed to further evaluate this promising treatment approach. Cocaine dependent outpatients will participate in a randomized, 2-group (levodopa vs. placebo), double-blind clinical trial. CM will be behavioral therapy platform for both treatment groups. The study will test the primary hypothesis that CM+levodopa will be more effective than CM+placebo in reducing cocaine use. This study is expected to validate the usefulness of a new behavioral-pharmacological treatment approach for cocaine dependence.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGlevodopa800mg levodopa and 200mg carbidopa per day
DRUGPlaceboPlacebo
BEHAVIORALCognitive Behavioral TherapyParticipants received individual cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) in 50-minute weekly sessions. These sessions were manual-driven and based on the relapse prevention model proposed by Marlatt and Gordon (1985). Trained masters-level therapists, under the supervision of senior therapists and the principal investigator, worked with participants to teach them how to recognize and cope with risky situations that could influence their cocaine use through self-monitoring of situational craving and drug use stimuli, coping skills training, and lifestyle modifications.
BEHAVIORALContingency ManagementAn abstinence-based contingency management (CM) procedure was used. Participants earned vouchers according to the reward schedule recommended by Budney and Higgins (1998), beginning at $2.50 for the first cocaine-negative urine. For each consecutive cocaine-negative urine, voucher values increased by $1.25 with a $10 bonus given for provision of three consecutive cocaine-negative urines within a week. A cocaine-positive urine or failure to provide a scheduled urine sample resulted in a reset of the schedule to the initial value of $2.50. After provision of five negative urines, the voucher returned to the value prior to the reset. Participants were able to redeem their vouchers for small amounts of cash (≤$25) or gift cards for goods and services.

Timeline

Start date
2008-01-01
Primary completion
2011-12-01
Completion
2011-12-01
First posted
2008-07-11
Last updated
2018-04-23
Results posted
2018-03-19

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00713583. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.