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Completed NON-SBIR/STTR RPGS NIH (US)

Treating Polysubstance Use in Methadone Maintenance: Application of Novel Digital Technology

$22.55M USD

Funder NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON DRUG ABUSE
Recipient Organization Friends Research Institute, Inc.
Country United States
Start Date Sep 30, 2022
End Date Sep 29, 2025
Duration 1,095 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10588517
Grant Description

Abstract Methadone is a highly effective treatment for opioid use disorder (OUD), but many patients leave treatment prematurely, placing them at high risk of relapse and overdose. Extensive research shows that comorbid cocaine use is associated with poor retention in methadone treatment. The proposed study will examine a novel intervention designed to improve

methadone treatment retention and other outcomes among people with opioid and cocaine polysubstance use. The design is a 2-arm randomized controlled trial conducted over a one- year period following methadone treatment entry. Retention (primary) and drug use (secondary) outcomes for methadone treatment as usual (TAU, n=120) will be compared with the addition of

the DynamiCare Health Contingency Management app (TAU+DCM, n=120). DCM is a personal digital therapy tool provided as an app on the patient’s smart phone. Its central feature is the delivery of evidence-based contingency management therapy in a convenient, remote, and fully automated fashion that ensures validity of target behaviors and immediacy of reward delivery.

Two target behaviors relevant to retention will be the primary focus of the DCM program: 1) abstinence from opiates and cocaine as verified via remote oral fluid testing, and 2) medication pickup from the methadone program as verified by clinic records. Participants in the TAU+DCM arm will receive financial rewards for achieving these pre-determined behavioral targets over a

48-week intervention period. Comprehensive assessment of all participants will be conducted at baseline, 3-, 6- and 12-months. Aim 1: To determine the relative effectiveness of TAU+DCM compared to TAU alone in improving methadone treatment retention through 12-months post treatment entry. Aim 2: To determine the relative effectiveness of TAU+DCM compared to TAU

alone in terms of [AIM 2a] reducing opioid use and cocaine use; and [Aim 2b] improving other secondary outcomes including non-targeted substance use and quality of life through 12- months post treatment entry. Aim 3: To explore app use patterns, acceptability, and perceived value of the personalized treatment intervention through 12-months post treatment entry.

Innovation lies in the platform and structure of CM delivery that ensures treatment fidelity with automation of remote behavioral monitoring and reward delivery without involvement of clinical staff. This project represents a novel application of digital therapeutics to enhance the effectiveness of OUD treatment with polysubstance use. Findings from this project can improve

the public health impact of methadone treatment by identifying an effective and scalable approach to address polysubstance use among patients at heightened risk of treatment dropout.

All Grantees

Friends Research Institute, Inc.

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