Trials / Recruiting
RecruitingNCT05142267
Stress and Opioid Misuse Risk: The Role of Endogenous Opioid and Endocannabinoid Mechanisms
- Status
- Recruiting
- Phase
- N/A
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 120 (estimated)
- Sponsor
- Vanderbilt University Medical Center · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 18 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Not accepted
Summary
The purpose of this study is to see how stress influences the effects of opioid pain medications often used to help relieve back pain. The study will help to learn more about how high stress levels could increase risk for pain medication misuse.
Detailed description
The purpose of this project is to advance mechanistic knowledge of how stress impacts differential opioid analgesic responses that enhance risk for opioid use disorder (OUD), potentially informing development of data-driven precision pain medicine algorithms to mitigate opioid related risks. The study aims to determine whether subjective and physiological stress-related measures are associated with analgesic and misuse-relevant subjective responses to placebo-controlled oxycodone administration. The study also aims to evaluate associations between stress-related measures and both endogenous opioid (EO) function and endocannabinoid (EC) levels and to test whether EO and EC mechanisms contribute to associations between stress-related measures and oxycodone responses Using a mixed between/within-subject design, the study will obtain baseline assessment of stress related markers followed by 3 laboratory sessions with assessment of endocannabinoids, back pain assessment, and exposure to standardized evoked pain stimuli after administration of placebo, naloxone, and oxycodone.
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| DRUG | Placebo | In randomized order (crossover) across 3 laboratory sessions, participants will undergo laboratory evoked thermal pain response testing with: 1) 0.13 mg/kg of oral oxycodone (in 1mg/ml syrup) plus 20ml i.v. saline placebo, 2) 8mg of i.v. naloxone (in 20ml saline vehicle) plus oral placebo syrup (quantity matching oxycodone syrup volume), or 3) 20ml i.v. saline placebo plus oral placebo syrup (quantity matching oxycodone syrup volume). Thermal pain testing utilizes a Medoc TSAII NeuroSensory Analyzer. This equipment is used to assess heat pain threshold and tolerance using an ascending method of limits protocol. |
| DRUG | Oxycodone | In randomized order (crossover) across 3 laboratory sessions, participants will undergo laboratory evoked thermal pain response testing with: 1) 0.13 mg/kg of oral oxycodone (in 1mg/ml syrup) plus 20ml i.v. saline placebo, 2) 8mg of i.v. naloxone (in 20ml saline vehicle) plus oral placebo syrup (quantity matching oxycodone syrup volume), or 3) 20ml i.v. saline placebo plus oral placebo syrup (quantity matching oxycodone syrup volume). Thermal pain testing utilizes a Medoc TSAII NeuroSensory Analyzer. This equipment is used to assess heat pain threshold and tolerance using an ascending method of limits protocol. |
| DRUG | Naloxone | In randomized order (crossover) across 3 laboratory sessions, participants will undergo laboratory evoked thermal pain response testing with: 1) 0.13 mg/kg of oral oxycodone (in 1mg/ml syrup) plus 20ml i.v. saline placebo, 2) 8mg of i.v. naloxone (in 20ml saline vehicle) plus oral placebo syrup (quantity matching oxycodone syrup volume), or 3) 20ml i.v. saline placebo plus oral placebo syrup (quantity matching oxycodone syrup volume). Thermal pain testing utilizes a Medoc TSAII NeuroSensory Analyzer. This equipment is used to assess heat pain threshold and tolerance using an ascending method of limits protocol. |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2022-03-02
- Primary completion
- 2026-07-31
- Completion
- 2026-07-31
- First posted
- 2021-12-02
- Last updated
- 2025-10-21
Locations
1 site across 1 country: United States
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05142267. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.