Clonidine for Relapse Prevention in Buprenorphine-Maintenance Patients

December 14, 2019 updated by: National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)

Background:

  • Though the drug buprenorphine effectively treats dependence on opioids like heroin, some abstinent patients relapse to use during treatment. This relapse may be triggered by stress or stressful situations, and buprenorphine probably has no specific protective effect in these situations. Buprenorphine probably also has no specific effect on relapse to cocaine use.
  • Research has shown that clonidine, a drug originally prescribed to treat high blood pressure and some symptoms of opioid withdrawal, can help block stress-induced relapse to heroin and cocaine seeking in rats. Researchers are interested in studying whether a combination of clonidine and buprenorphine may be more effective in preventing drug relapse than administering one of the medications alone.

Objectives:

- To determine whether clonidine, given to abstinent patients maintained on buprenorphine, is more effective than placebo in preventing relapse to heroin or cocaine use.

Eligibility:

- Individuals between 18 and 50 years of age who are current cocaine or heroin users seeking treatment.

Design:

  • The study will last up to 36 weeks, with four phases of treatment and a follow-up evaluation. Three times a week, participants will be asked to report illicit drug use and provide urine and breath samples. Throughout the study, participants will receive individual counseling in weekly 40 60 minute sessions. Other samples and tests will be scheduled as required by the study researchers.
  • Patients will be stabilized on daily buprenorphine over the first 14 days of the study.
  • Weeks 1 8: Participants will receive vouchers for regular substance-free urine samples. Those who successfully complete this phase will continue to the next part of the study.
  • Weeks 7 9: Participants will receive either clonidine or placebo along with the buprenorphine. The dose of clonidine will be stabilized during this time.
  • Weeks 9 22: Participants will continue to receive either clonidine or placebo along with the buprenorphine. During this part of the study, participants will keep electronic diaries to record drug use or craving and to record data on mood, stress levels, and activity.
  • Weeks 23 28: Participants will stop taking the clonidine or placebo, but will continue the buprenorphine treatment. Participants will continue to keep electronic diaries.
  • Weeks 29 36: Participants will have the choice of transferring to a community clinic transfer or gradually reducing doses of buprenorphine to end the study.
  • Participants will return for a follow-up visit and urine sample 6 months after the end of the study.

Study Overview

Status

Completed

Intervention / Treatment

Detailed Description

Background. Though buprenorphine effectively treats opioid dependence, some abstinent patients relapse to maladaptive use of opioids during treatment. Relapse may be triggered by stress. Rodent studies have demonstrated that stress can induce relapse to heroin and cocaine use (Erb, et al., 1996; Shaham, et al., 1996; Shaham and Stewart, 1995). In a rodent model, stress-induced relapse to heroin and cocaine seeking is blocked by the alpha-2 adrenergic agonist clonidine. In this study, clonidine will be compared to placebo in preventing relapse to opioid abuse in opioid maintained patients who have achieved abstinence while on buprenorphine and contingency management.

Scientific goals. To determine whether clonidine, given to abstinent patients maintained on buprenorphine, prevents relapse to opioid use more effectively than placebo.

Participant population. 300 opioid-dependent outpatients (120 evaluable). Target enrollment will include 40 persent women and 60 percent minorities (mostly African-American).

Experimental design and methods. The study will be a randomized double-blind clinical trial. Two treatment groups will be studied (60/group), one receiving clonidine and the other receiving placebo. Assignment to treatment group will be randomized. All patients will receive buprenorphine daily (8 mg to 24 mg SL) and individual counseling weekly throughout 28 weeks of treatment. In order to establish abstinence prior to clonidine induction, after one week of stabilization on buprenorphine, they will receive contingent vouchers for opioid-negative urine specimens for 8 weeks (weeks 1-8). Patients who are abstinent from illicit opioids during weeks 5 and 6 will be randomized to receive clonidine (0.3 mg oral dose) or clonidine placebo from weeks 9 through 20. Participants who are not abstinent will be switched to methadone for four weeks (usual dose from 50 mg to 100 mg) followed by an eight week methadone taper. Assignment to clonidine or placebo will be double-blind. Weeks 21 and 22 will include a clonidine taper to avoid rebound hypertension. From weeks 23-28, participants will receive buprenorphine and counseling only, and then will be offered assistance to transfer to another program; those who do not transfer will undergo an 8-week buprenorphine taper. The primary outcome measures will be longest duration of opioid abstinence, time to relapse, and the proportion of opioid-negative urine specimens over time during the Intervention phase. In addition, fluctuations in drug use, drug craving, stress, and HIV-risk behaviors such as injection drug use will be assessed via ecological momentary assessment (EMA).

Benefits to participants and/or society. Participants will receive buprenorphine, drug counseling, and contingency-management therapy. The buprenorphine and voucher interventions are likely to reduce participants' use of opioids. Counseling will include reduction of HIV risk behaviors.

Risks to participants. Participants may experience side effects from clonidine, buprenorphine, or methadone and discomfort during withdrawal from each drug. In particular, discontinuation of clonidine may cause rebound hypertension. The EMA component of the study may generate some assessment burden.

Study Type

Interventional

Enrollment (Actual)

208

Phase

  • Phase 1

Contacts and Locations

This section provides the contact details for those conducting the study, and information on where this study is being conducted.

Study Locations

    • Maryland
      • Baltimore, Maryland, United States, 21224
        • National Institute on Drug Abuse

Participation Criteria

Researchers look for people who fit a certain description, called eligibility criteria. Some examples of these criteria are a person's general health condition or prior treatments.

Eligibility Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study

18 years to 50 years (Adult)

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Genders Eligible for Study

All

Description

  • INCLUSION CRITERIA:

    1. Age between 18 and 60
    2. Evidence of physical dependence on opioids (self-report, urine screen, physical exam)
    3. Seeking treatment for opioid dependence
    4. Able to attend treatment clinic 7 days/week

EXCLUSION CRITERIA:

General-

  1. Poor venous access
  2. Urologic conditions that would inhibit urine collection
  3. Pregnancy or breastfeeding
  4. Failure to agree to use a medically effective form of contraception while in the study (in women who are sexually active with a male partner and able to get pregnant). Acceptable forms of contraception for this study include: hormonal contraceptives (birth control pills, injectable hormones, vaginal ring hormones), surgical sterility (tubal ligation or hysterectomy); IUD; Diaphragm with spermicide; Condom with spermicide
  5. Current physical dependence on alcohol or sedative-hypnotics, e.g. benzodiazepines

Psychiatric-

  1. Cognitive impairment severe enough to preclude informed consent or valid responses on questionnaires (Shipley Institute of Living scale estimated full-scale IQ less than 80)
  2. History of schizophrenia or any other DSM-IV psychotic disorder
  3. History of bipolar disorder
  4. Current Major Depressive Disorder

Medical-

  1. Any active or untreated medical illness that in the view of the investigators would compromise participation in research
  2. Allergy or intolerance to either buprenorphine or clonidine
  3. Cerebrovascular disease
  4. Conduction disturbances (e.g., second-degree heart block, third-degree heart block, atrial fibrillation, ventricular tachycardia) or arrhythmias
  5. Myocardial infarction, or documented coronary artery disease
  6. Congestive heart failure
  7. Chronic renal failure, as estimated by Cr > 2.0
  8. CD4 < 200 or evidence of severely compromised immune system /AIDS
  9. Marked, sustained bradycardia (HR < 45 bpm) on three separate occasions
  10. Marked, sustained low blood pressure (SBP <95 or DBP < 40 mm Hg) over three separate readings
  11. Marked, sustained high blood pressure (SBP >160 mm Hg, DBP >100 mm Hg) over several readings, without being on antihypertensive medications.
  12. ECG changes suggestive of acute ischemia, clinical important arrhythmia, left bundle branch block, or other changes that concerns the MRP will exclude the participant. If accompanied by cardiovascular complaints such as chest pain or syncope, less specific ECG findings will also exclude the patient. When in doubt, the ECG will be sent to cardiology on a prn basis for a manual reading.
  13. Orthostatic hypotension (upon standing for 3 minutes, there is a 20 mm Hg decrease in systolic blood pressure or a 10 mmHg decrease in diastolic blood pressure accompanied by an increase by 20 bpm in heart rate) on two separate readings.

Taking contraindicated medications-

  1. Beta blockers
  2. Tricyclic antidepressants
  3. Antipsychotics
  4. Mah huang
  5. Yohimbe
  6. Ephedra
  7. Sildenafil citrate (Viagra). Sildenafil citrate doses > 25mg should not be taken within 4 hours of taking an alpha blocker or it can produce significant and symptomatic hypotension (Pfizer). Of note, Viagra, like buprenorphine, is metabolized by cytochrome P450 3A4. Ingestion of buprenorphine could potentate the effects of sildenafil citrate which could extent the period of safety to > 4 hrs from when an alpha blocker could be taken after Viagra ingestion.

Family history of sudden cardiac death at age < 50

Lab Test and Lab Values:

WBC* < 1,500 > 13,000 #/CUMM

HCT < 33 > 49 Percent

Platelets < 100 > 500 K/CUMM

Sodium < 132 > 149 MEQ/L

Potassium < 3.5 > 5.2 MEQ/L

Calcium < 8.4 > 10.5 MG/DL

Magnesium < 1.3 > 3 MG/DL

<TAB>

BUN > 35 MG/DL

Cr<TAB> > 2.0 MG/DL

<TAB>

Alk Phos<TAB> > 200 U/L

AST<TAB> > 200 U/L

ALT<TAB> > 200 U/L

GGT<TAB> > 400 U/L

Albumin<TAB> < 3 GM/DL

Total bilirubin > 2.0 MG/DL

Direct bilirubin > 0.4 MG/DL

TSH<TAB> < 0.27 > 4.2 UIU/ML

<TAB>

*Leukocytosis will prompt further investigation before clearance.<TAB>

Study Plan

This section provides details of the study plan, including how the study is designed and what the study is measuring.

How is the study designed?

Design Details

  • Primary Purpose: Treatment
  • Allocation: Randomized
  • Interventional Model: Parallel Assignment

Arms and Interventions

Participant Group / Arm
Intervention / Treatment
Experimental: Arm 1
clonidine up to 0.3 mg/day oral
Placebo Comparator: Arm 2
oral capsules daily

What is the study measuring?

Primary Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Time Frame
Opiate-negative urine screens
Time Frame: 38 weeks
38 weeks

Secondary Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Time Frame
HIV risk behaviors
Time Frame: 38 weeks
38 weeks
Craving
Time Frame: 18 weeks
18 weeks

Collaborators and Investigators

This is where you will find people and organizations involved with this study.

Publications and helpful links

The person responsible for entering information about the study voluntarily provides these publications. These may be about anything related to the study.

Study record dates

These dates track the progress of study record and summary results submissions to ClinicalTrials.gov. Study records and reported results are reviewed by the National Library of Medicine (NLM) to make sure they meet specific quality control standards before being posted on the public website.

Study Major Dates

Study Start

November 8, 2005

Study Completion (Actual)

July 30, 2014

Study Registration Dates

First Submitted

February 22, 2006

First Submitted That Met QC Criteria

February 22, 2006

First Posted (Estimate)

February 23, 2006

Study Record Updates

Last Update Posted (Actual)

December 17, 2019

Last Update Submitted That Met QC Criteria

December 14, 2019

Last Verified

September 17, 2014

More Information

This information was retrieved directly from the website clinicaltrials.gov without any changes. If you have any requests to change, remove or update your study details, please contact register@clinicaltrials.gov. As soon as a change is implemented on clinicaltrials.gov, this will be updated automatically on our website as well.

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