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RecruitingNCT06832007

The Effect of Light Intervention on Recovery in Individuals With Opioid Use Disorder (OUD)

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
105 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Alabama at Birmingham · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 60 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Opioid use disorder (OUD) is a chronic relapsing disorder and is well-known for its high-risk rate of overdoses and death. In OUD, sleep and circadian disruptions are highly prevalent, interfere with opioid maintenance treatment outcomes and increase the risk of relapse. So far, commonly used pharmacological sleep treatments fail to improve sleep or decrease illicit drug use in OUD. Thus, there is an urgent need to fill this research gap. Previous work showed that OUD patients who were receiving opioid agonist treatment (MOUD+) exhibited greater irregularity of sleep-wake cycle. In OUD patients, sleep-wake irregularity was associated with years of heroin use and low light exposure. Bright light therapy (BLT) is a very promising circadian/sleep intervention for several sleep, psychiatric and neurological disorders. BLT improved circadian, sleep outcomes and negative mood. In a pilot study, BLT improved objective and subjective sleep in patients with alcohol use disorder. Here investigators proposed an intervention study for MOUD+ patients to determine effects of BLT as an adjunct treatment on sleep and circadian outcomes including endogenous circadian rhythm, rest-activity rhythm and sleep neurophysiology (Primary objectives); and to determine effects of BLT on brain function and on clinical outcomes including negative affect, craving and illicit drug use and whether changes in sleep and circadian rhythm mediate the BLT effect on brain recovery and clinical outcomes (Secondary objectives). Fifty MOUD+ will be assigned either to bright light or to dim light group for 2 weeks. The groups will be matched for age, sex, race and OUD medication (Methadone vs Buprenorphine). The study will run throughout the year such that it occurs during all seasons. Light exposure will be measured with light sensor for additional control. All MOUD+ participants will have a daily 30-min light exposure (bright or dim blue light) in the morning after their habitual wake-up time and will be asked to avoid evening light before bed. Dim light melatonin onset, accelerometer, sleep EEG and questionnaires will be used to measure objective and subjective sleep and circadian outcomes. For brain function, cue-reactivity task will be used to assess brain activation during drug craving. Resting state functional connectivity and brain state dynamics will be assessed by rsfMRI. Mood, opiate craving and illicit drug use will be assessed. All measures will be repeated before and after the treatment. Investigators expect that BLT would normalize sleep and circadian outcomes, attenuate impairments in brain functions and result in better clinical outcomes. If successful, light therapy will provide add-on benefits to opioid agonist therapy and facilitate OUD recovery process.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEAYO light glasses (experimental)OUD patients are asked to wear AYO light therapy glasses (wavelength 470nm ± 2nm, irradiance 250 μW/cm2 or approx.1500 m-EDI) daily for 30 min after habitual wake-up times for two weeks.
DEVICEAYO light glasses (comparator)The comparison group will wear the same AYO glasses but with lower intensity (1% light intensity) compared to the experimental group. This group will also self-administer 30 min of light from commercially available light glasses each morning for two weeks

Timeline

Start date
2025-09-06
Primary completion
2028-09-16
Completion
2028-09-16
First posted
2025-02-18
Last updated
2025-10-20

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06832007. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.