Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Recruiting

RecruitingNCT05006079

Opioid/Benzodiazepine Polydrug Abuse: Aim 3

Opioid/Benzodiazepine Polydrug Abuse: Integrating Research on Mechanisms, Treatment and Policies - Study 3

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
24 (estimated)
Sponsor
Wayne State University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

In this study, the investigators will measure affective, neurocognitive and behavioral outcomes related to chronic use of opioids and benzodiazepines (screening phase), and in response to the administration of the opioid morphine, the benzodiazepine alprazolam, morphine then alprazolam, alprazolam then morphine, morphine+alprazolam simultaneously, and placebo (laboratory pharmacology experiment). The latter will enable the investigators to assess the effects of an opioid alone, benzodiazepine alone, concurrent and simultaneous administration of opioid+benzodiazepine, relative to a placebo control.

Detailed description

The investigators propose that benzodiazepine/opioid polysubstance abuse is perpetuated by a dual-deficit in affective/hedonic regulation (difficulties modulating emotional reactions relative to the context and the person's long-term goals). Furthermore, the investigators propose that this dual-deficit biases neurocognition (interferes with executive function) and behaviors (guided by negative reinforcement processes such that polysubstance use acutely blunts aversive states and directs actions away from natural rewards). The scientific premise for this project builds on George Koob's foundational concept that addiction is a 'reward-deficit/stress-surfeit disorder'. There is an urgent need to obtain clinical pharmacology and mechanistic data to test this hypothesis of dual-deficit in affective/hedonic regulation. This study will use human laboratory methods to test affective, neurocognitive and behavioral mechanisms that maintain benzodiazepine/opioid polysubstance abuse. The screening phase of this human laboratory study will include measures of affective dysregulation related to benzodiazepine/opioid polysubstance use behaviors. These include distress tolerance, pain sensitivity and nocebo responding, and biomarkers (e.g. plasma cortisol). Also, the investigators will include behavioral measures of drug and non-drug reinforcement (e.g. economic simulations of price elasticity of alprazolam and morphine) and neurocognition (e.g. drug attentional bias, response inhibition, cognitive flexibility). During the pharmacology study the investigators will administer oral placebo, morphine alone and alprazolam doses alone, as well as morphine and alprazolam sequentially (in counterbalanced order) and simultaneously. Following each drug administration, the investigators will measure responses in affective (e.g. anxiety levels, distress tolerance), neurocognitive (e.g. executive function, learning) and behavioral domains (e.g. impulsivity, psychomotor function, reinforcer preferences). The lab study is highly significant because we lack prospective, controlled, dose-response studies that identify whether opioids, benzodiazepines, and their combination modulate core phenotypes that underlie this harmful polysubstance abuse. Testing effects of both sequential and simultaneous benzodiazepine/opioid administration within the same individuals will establish a firm foundation for understanding which phenotypes are sensitive to disruption and may respond to treatment. Findings from this study will help to focus clinical assessment and identify mechanisms that maintain benzodiazepine/opioid polysubstance abuse, toward the development of novel medication-assisted, evidence-based psychosocial interventions.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGMorphineimmediate release oral 15mg dose
DRUGAlprazolamoral 0.25mg dose
DRUGPlaceboLactose

Timeline

Start date
2024-03-13
Primary completion
2026-12-01
Completion
2026-12-01
First posted
2021-08-16
Last updated
2025-12-30

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05006079. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.