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BiNational Quit Using Drugs Intervention Trial (BiN-QUIT)

8 janvier 2015 mis à jour par: Lillian Gelberg, University of California, Los Angeles

US-Mexico Binational Quit Using Drugs Intervention Trial (QUIT)

The goal of the US-Mexico Binational Quit Using Drugs Intervention Trial (QUIT) is a multi-site study conducted in the US (East Los Angeles) and Mexico (Tijuana) which aims to reduce drug demand on both sides of the border. The study also aims to build a collaborative partnership between the US and Mexico research teams. The Bi-National QUIT Study will conduct a randomized control trial for risky drug use in several Los Angeles area community health centers. The intent of the trial is to interrupt the progression to addiction for the casual and occasional users of illicit drugs and non-medical users of pharmaceuticals. The Bi-National QUIT protocol will include (1) a computerized assessment of the patient's drug-use history (2) very brief (<5 minutes) clinician advice during a patients pre-arranged medical visit which will be preceded by a computerized assessment of the patient's drug-use history (3) a post visit assessment and video doctor (repeating the very brief clinician advice) in the waiting room (4) two post-visit telephone drug-use counseling sessions to be conducted by drug-health educators at approximately 2 and 6 weeks after the start of the intervention. Follow-up assessments will be conducted at 3 months post-randomization. Parallel activities will take place in the U.S./Los Angeles sites and Mexico/Tijuana sites. Data will be shared between both teams. Data analysis will be collaboratively conducted by both teams.

Aperçu de l'étude

Statut

Complété

Type d'étude

Interventionnel

Inscription (Réel)

134

Phase

  • N'est pas applicable

Critères de participation

Les chercheurs recherchent des personnes qui correspondent à une certaine description, appelée critères d'éligibilité. Certains exemples de ces critères sont l'état de santé général d'une personne ou des traitements antérieurs.

Critère d'éligibilité

Âges éligibles pour étudier

18 ans et plus (Adulte, Adulte plus âgé)

Accepte les volontaires sains

Oui

Sexes éligibles pour l'étude

Tout

La description

Inclusion Criteria:

US Sites: Inclusion Criteria

Patients

  • Adult men and women 18 and older receiving care at the study clinics
  • Will be living in the LA area for the next three months
  • Have a phone number at which they can be reached for the next three months
  • Has a primary care visit for themselves on the date of recruitment and enrollment
  • Has a primary care visit with a regular clinic provider on the date of recruitment and enrollment
  • English or Spanish-speaking
  • Report of drug use in the previous 90 days (i.e., cocaine or amphetamines), and has an ASSIST score between 4 and 26 indicating 'at risk' drug use
  • Accessible by telephone where they can be contacted over time during the study (to conduct follow-up health education phone calls)
  • Able (not cognitively impaired) and willing to cooperate with data collection and research procedures, including 2 telephone counseling sessions and 2-week, 6-week, and 3-month follow-up assessments
  • Planning to be in the Los Angeles area for the next 3 months so they can complete the study period

Clinicians • Regular staff primary care clinicians of our study clinics

Mexico Sites: Inclusion Criteria

Patients

  • Adult men and women 18 and older receiving care at the study clinics
  • Will be living in the Tijuana area for the next three months
  • Have a phone number at which they can be reached for the next three months
  • Has a primary care visit for themselves on the date of recruitment and enrollment
  • Has a primary care visit with a regular clinic provider on the date of recruitment and enrollment
  • Spanish-speaking
  • Report of drug use in the previous 90 days (i.e., cocaine or amphetamines), and has an ASSIST score between 4 and 26 indicating 'at risk' drug use
  • Accessible by telephone where they can be contacted over time during the study (to conduct follow-up health education phone calls)
  • Able (not cognitively impaired) and willing to cooperate with data collection and research procedures, including 2 telephone counseling sessions and 2-week, 6-week, and 3-month follow-up assessments
  • Planning to be in the Tijuana area for the next 3 months so they can complete the study period

Clinicians

• Regular staff primary care clinicians of our study clinics

Exclusion Criteria:

US Sites: Exclusion Criteria

Patients

  • Pregnancy. Women who report being pregnant at the time of randomization will be excluded from participation. This latter exclusion criterion is based on the following reasons: (a) The interaction of drug use (in any amount) and fetal-maternal health is physiologically complex and beyond the scope of this proposed intervention. (b) Drug users who are pregnant are considered high-risk pregnancies and will likely be lost to follow-up during the study as they will be promptly referred by their primary care clinician to an obstetrician per usual clinic protocol. However, enrolled patients who become pregnant after the intervention will not be withdrawn. Their eventual exits from the study will be counted as drop-outs and will be included as "no change" in our "intent to treat" analysis. Finally, (c) a tailored brief intervention protocol for pregnant women may require more than simple clinician advice and a 2-session phone health education program. Such an intervention would be more effective if designed around the activities of prenatal care. Previous RCTs of problem alcohol use targeting healthy adults have excluded patients who are pregnant.8,9
  • Homeless status. The clinics we have chosen have large numbers of homeless patients. Since this is a study on the general poverty population, we are asking homeless status in order to avoid over-sampling homeless patients. We will set a quota on number of homeless patients we can enroll without over-sampling these patients. If we reach this quota, we will apply homeless status as an exclusion criteria for subsequent subjects.
  • Repeaters. Patients who have been screened or enrolled before will be asked a set of repeater questions. This includes a question on whether they have ever been involved in our UCLA study at the clinic before. We will also ask them a set of questions that combines aspects about the potential subject (mother's first name, father's first name, month and day of birth) that will screen them out if they screen again in the future.
  • ASSIST Score: Drug Dependence. The RA will receive a message that the subject scored 27+ on all illicit drugs on the WHO ASSIST (i.e. indication of possible substance dependence/addiction). The RA will inform the patient that they are at risk for certain health behaviors and ask the patient if they want to disclose this information to their doctor. If they agree to disclose information to their doctor then we will fill out a letter informing the doctor of patient's dependence on specific drugs. We will also provide the patient with a list of local substance abuse treatment referrals. Please see Appendix A for copies of these referrals (Appendix A. Los Angeles County Substance Abuse Treatment Facilities).
  • From Date of Screening Subject Enrolled in a Drug Treatment Facility. Subjects enrolled in a treatment program are excluded from the study. These subjects show commitment to the treatment program. Moreover, these program would serve as a competing intervention to ours, biasing the potential effect of our intervention.

Clinicians • No exclusion criteria apply to clinicians

Mexico Sites: Exclusion Criteria

Patients

  • Pregnancy. Women who report being pregnant at the time of randomization will be excluded from participation. This latter exclusion criterion is based on the following reasons: (a) The interaction of drug use (in any amount) and fetal-maternal health is physiologically complex and beyond the scope of this proposed intervention. (b) Drug users who are pregnant are considered high-risk pregnancies and will likely be lost to follow-up during the study as they will be promptly referred by their primary care clinician to an obstetrician per usual clinic protocol. However, enrolled patients who become pregnant after the intervention will not be withdrawn. Their eventual exits from the study will be counted as drop-outs and will be included as "no change" in our "intent to treat" analysis. Finally, (c) a tailored brief intervention protocol for pregnant women may require more than simple clinician advice and a 2-session phone health education program. Such an intervention would be more effective if designed around the activities of prenatal care. Previous RCTs of problem alcohol use targeting healthy adults have excluded patients who are pregnant.
  • Homeless status. The clinics we have chosen have large numbers of homeless patients. Since this is a study on the general poverty population, we are asking homeless status in order to avoid over-sampling homeless patients. We will set a quota on number of homeless patients we can enroll without over-sampling these patients. If we reach this quota, we will apply homeless status as an exclusion criteria for subsequent subjects.
  • Repeaters. Patients who have been screened or enrolled before will be asked a set of repeater questions. This includes a question on whether they have ever been involved in the Living Well study at the clinic before. We will also ask them a set of questions that combines aspects about the potential subject (mother's first name, father's first name, month and day of birth) that will screen them out if they screen again in the future.
  • ASSIST Score: Drug Dependence. The RA will receive a message that the subject scored 27+ on all illicit drugs on the WHO ASSIST (i.e. indication of possible substance dependence/addiction). The RA will inform the patient that they are at risk for certain health behaviors and ask the patient if they want to disclose this information to their doctor. If they agree to disclose information to their doctor then we will fill out a letter informing the doctor of patient's dependence on specific drugs. We will also provide the patient with a list of local substance abuse treatment referrals.
  • From Date of Screening Subject Enrolled in a Drug Treatment Facility. Subjects enrolled in a treatment program are excluded from the study. These subjects show commitment to the treatment program. Moreover, these program would serve as a competing intervention to ours, biasing the potential effect of our intervention.

Clinicians

• No exclusion criteria apply to clinicians

Plan d'étude

Cette section fournit des détails sur le plan d'étude, y compris la façon dont l'étude est conçue et ce que l'étude mesure.

Comment l'étude est-elle conçue ?

Détails de conception

  • Objectif principal: La prévention
  • Répartition: Randomisé
  • Modèle interventionnel: Affectation parallèle
  • Masquage: Seul

Armes et Interventions

Groupe de participants / Bras
Intervention / Traitement
Expérimental: Intervention
The Quit Using Drugs Intervention Trial (QUIT) experimental arm includes: screening, very brief clinician advice, and telephone drug-use health education to reduce 'at risk' drug use and thus interrupt progression from casual or episodic abuse to dependence.
The goal of the Quit Using Drugs Intervention Trial (QUIT) is to conduct a small RCT of a primary care clinic-based very brief intervention protocol for reducing the use of illegal drugs and the occurrences of drug-related harm in low-income, racially-diverse patient populations at two 'safety-net' clinics in Los Angeles. The design will emphasize screening, very brief clinician advice, and telephone drug-use health education to reduce 'at risk' drug use and thus interrupt progression from casual or episodic abuse to dependence.
Autres noms:
  • QUIT
Aucune intervention: Control
Usual care and a health education booklet and video on cancer prevention

Que mesure l'étude ?

Principaux critères de jugement

Mesure des résultats
Délai
Change from Baseline Self-reported number of drug-free days at 3 months
Délai: Past 30 and 90 days
Past 30 and 90 days

Collaborateurs et enquêteurs

C'est ici que vous trouverez les personnes et les organisations impliquées dans cette étude.

Les enquêteurs

  • Chercheur principal: Lillian Gelberg, MD, MSPH, University of California, Los Angeles

Publications et liens utiles

La personne responsable de la saisie des informations sur l'étude fournit volontairement ces publications. Il peut s'agir de tout ce qui concerne l'étude.

Dates d'enregistrement des études

Ces dates suivent la progression des dossiers d'étude et des soumissions de résultats sommaires à ClinicalTrials.gov. Les dossiers d'étude et les résultats rapportés sont examinés par la Bibliothèque nationale de médecine (NLM) pour s'assurer qu'ils répondent à des normes de contrôle de qualité spécifiques avant d'être publiés sur le site Web public.

Dates principales de l'étude

Début de l'étude

1 février 2013

Achèvement primaire (Réel)

1 février 2014

Achèvement de l'étude (Réel)

1 février 2014

Dates d'inscription aux études

Première soumission

6 septembre 2013

Première soumission répondant aux critères de contrôle qualité

10 septembre 2013

Première publication (Estimation)

16 septembre 2013

Mises à jour des dossiers d'étude

Dernière mise à jour publiée (Estimation)

12 janvier 2015

Dernière mise à jour soumise répondant aux critères de contrôle qualité

8 janvier 2015

Dernière vérification

1 janvier 2015

Plus d'information

Termes liés à cette étude

Autres numéros d'identification d'étude

  • BINAT 3P30DA027

Ces informations ont été extraites directement du site Web clinicaltrials.gov sans aucune modification. Si vous avez des demandes de modification, de suppression ou de mise à jour des détails de votre étude, veuillez contacter register@clinicaltrials.gov. Dès qu'un changement est mis en œuvre sur clinicaltrials.gov, il sera également mis à jour automatiquement sur notre site Web .

Essais cliniques sur Quit Using Drugs Intervention Trial

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