Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT01539941

Family-Based Protocol for Medication Integration in Treatment of Comorbid ASU/ADHD in Routine Care

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 1
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
14 (actual)
Sponsor
The National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
13 Years – 17 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The goal of this proposal is to develop and pilot a brief protocol designed to systematically integrate pharmacological interventions for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) into behavioral treatment services for adolescent substance users with comorbid ADHD in everyday care. ADHD is a prevalent co-occurring condition for adolescent substance use (ASU) that can significantly impede successful ASU treatment but is vastly under-diagnosed and undertreated among ASU clients in agency settings. Moreover, ADHD medication acceptance and compliance is particularly difficult to achieve in high-risk adolescent populations.

Detailed description

The goal of this proposal is to develop and pilot a brief protocol designed to systematically integrate pharmacological interventions for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) into behavioral treatment services for adolescent substance users with comorbid ADHD in everyday care. ADHD is a prevalent co-occurring condition for adolescent substance use (ASU) that can significantly impede successful ASU treatment but is vastly under-diagnosed and undertreated among ASU clients in agency settings. Moreover, ADHD medication acceptance and compliance is particularly difficult to achieve in high-risk adolescent populations. The proposed R21 study will use an interrupted time series design to test a brief protocol designed to promote integration of evidence-based ADHD pharmacotherapy into routine behavioral services for ASU: Medication Integration Protocol (MIP). MIP is a 5-session family-based protocol delivered during the early portion of ASU treatment that contains three research-based elements: (1) standardized psychiatric assessment and family-focused psychoeducation about adolescent ADHD; (2) an approved ADHD medication regimen (OROS-MPH) with demonstrated efficacy for ASU/ADHD clients; (3) family-based interventions to support medication acceptance (as indicated) and coordination of care between psychiatric and behavioral services. MIP will be integrated into existing family-based services at one partnering clinical site: 20 ASU/ADHD cases will be treated by site family therapists who will be newly trained and monitored in MIP. The partnering clinic provides family therapy as the routine standard of care for outpatient behavioral health and offers on-site child psychiatry services. Primary study aims will yield proof-of-concept data on MIP feasibility and fidelity in usual care and evidence of MIP impact on psychiatric and behavioral services utilization, medication acceptance and compliance, and satisfaction with treatment services. Exploratory analyses will generate effect sizes for the short-term impact of MIP on the main targets of ADHD medication: ADHD symptoms and executive cognitive functioning. New study products would include a standardized and piloted MIP protocol, clinician training and fidelity monitoring procedures, and an observational fidelity instrument. If validated, MIP could be utilized as a stand-alone intervention in everyday care, or, be combined with existing manualized treatments for ASU in an effort to develop fully integrated treatment models for ASU/ADHD. Also, MIP could be delivered in conjunction with either family-based treatments or individual treatments that can flexibly include caregivers in early sessions.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALMedication integration protocolMIP is a 5 session protocol. The first session consists of pretreatment assessment activities using measures administered during routine clinical intake. The following sessions, MIP Sessions 1-4, are meant to be delivered sequentially, commencing sometime after session 2 or 3 of treatment, that is, after completion of initial treatment contracting and engagement interventions that will usually be focused on ASU-related referral problems for this population. The proposed pilot work will shed light on the optimal timing for MIP Sessions 1-4.

Timeline

Start date
2011-08-01
Primary completion
2014-05-01
Completion
2014-05-01
First posted
2012-02-28
Last updated
2015-08-04

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01539941. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.