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The Neuroeconomics of Behavioral Therapies for Adolescent Substance Abuse (Imaging)

15 marzo 2018 aggiornato da: Catherine Stanger, Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center
This study will measure the brain activity of adolescent substance abusers while they make decisions about their preferences to receive smaller, immediate rewards versus larger delayed rewards. The investigators expect that patterns of brain activity while engaged in this decision making task will predict response to treatment among adolescent substance users. The investigators expect to use the results of this study to develop more effective treatments for adolescent substance abuse

Panoramica dello studio

Stato

Completato

Descrizione dettagliata

Little is known about the role of adolescent neurodevelopment in adolescent substance abuse treatment outcomes. The development and evaluation of adolescent substance abuse treatments rarely includes consideration of varying cognitive capacities and their neural representations as determinants of individual variation in treatment response. This proposed R21 project would address this gap by identifying associations among decision making, task-related neural processing, and treatment outcome among adolescents participating/have participated in two randomized clinical trials for adolescent substance abuse. Increasing our understanding of neural processes that underlie decision making in adolescent marijuana and alcohol users would inform the development of future intervention and prevention efforts.

This complementary project draws subjects from two studies investigating contingency-management (CM) based treatments "Behavioral Treatment of Adolescent Marijuana Abuse" (DA015186), and "Family Based Contingency Management for Adolescent Alcohol Abuse" (AA016917). Both trials compare a unique CM intervention that involves an abstinence-based reinforcement program to a standard, state of the art cognitive behavioral intervention. Analyses would be performed separately for the two samples, with hypotheses tested first using the Marijuana sample, and assessed for replication/specificity using the Alcohol sample. The proposed project would explore novel neurobiological predictors of response to CM interventions.

Adolescents recruited into the Marijuana Trial (n=69; 23 per treatment arm) and the Alcohol Trial (n=54; 27 per treatment arm) during the period of this R21 project would participate in a single neuroimaging session as soon after the intake session as possible, within 7 to 30 days. During the neuroimaging session, adolescents would make intertemporal choice decisions in a Delay Discounting task regarding gains of $100 and $1,000. Preliminary data from the Marijuana trial demonstrates significant association between performance on this behavioral delay discounting task and abstinence achieved during treatment over and above the significant effect of treatment condition. The investigators seek to understand the neural processes that underlie performance on this laboratory task, and the degree to which variation in these neural processes relates to and predicts adolescent substance abuse treatment outcomes. The conceptual framework for the proposed project is based on the neuroeconomics of addiction in general, and the competing neural systems hypothesis in particular (Bechara, 2005a; Bickel, et al., 2007; Daw, et al., 2005; Jentsch & Taylor, 1999). This behavioral choice hypothesis postulates a biased competition between an "impulsive" (or ''reflexive") neural system (including the striatum, amygdala, ventral pallidum, and related structures) and the "executive" (or "reflective") neural system (including the prefrontal cortex) in understanding patterns of suboptimal decision making among substance-dependent individuals. An overarching hypothesis is that differing responses to distinct treatment approaches (CM vs. CBT) are partially determined by the pattern of activation or functional connectivity within and across these competing neural systems. These project hypotheses would be tested by the following specific aims:

Primary Aims:

  • Determine the degree to which performance on a laboratory delay discounting task correlates with activity in impulsive and/or executive neural systems.
  • Determine the degree to which performance on a laboratory delay discounting task and neural processing predict adolescent substance abuse treatment outcome over and above the effects of treatment condition.

Secondary Aim:

  • Explore interactions between response to CM and delay discounting-related neural processing.

In summary, this proposed exploratory/developmental project would importantly contribute to the understanding of the role of neural processing in adolescent substance-abuse treatment processes and outcome. Specifically, this study has the potential to reveal relations among decision making, neural processing, and treatment outcomes, including the role of patterns of neural activation on response to contingency management among adolescent substance abusers. Results will have implications for future research on adolescent neurodevelopment and adolescent substance abuse treatment. The potential to use neuroscience findings to better understand and improve treatment outcomes in substance-abusing adolescents will have strong public health impact.

Tipo di studio

Osservativo

Iscrizione (Effettivo)

51

Contatti e Sedi

Questa sezione fornisce i recapiti di coloro che conducono lo studio e informazioni su dove viene condotto lo studio.

Luoghi di studio

    • New Hampshire
      • Lebanon, New Hampshire, Stati Uniti, 03756
        • Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth

Criteri di partecipazione

I ricercatori cercano persone che corrispondano a una certa descrizione, chiamata criteri di ammissibilità. Alcuni esempi di questi criteri sono le condizioni generali di salute di una persona o trattamenti precedenti.

Criteri di ammissibilità

Età idonea allo studio

Da 12 anni a 18 anni (Bambino, Adulto)

Accetta volontari sani

Sessi ammissibili allo studio

Tutto

Metodo di campionamento

Campione non probabilistico

Popolazione di studio

Adolescents recruited into the Marijuana Trial and the Alcohol Trial during the period of the R21 project would participate in a single neuroimaging session as soon after the intake session as possible.

Descrizione

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Participants must be 12 to 18 years old and have a parent/guardian who can participate.
  • Youth must meet either of the following inclusion criteria:

    1. Report using marijuana during the previous 30 days or provide a marijuana-positive urine test, plus meet criteria for Cannabis Abuse or Dependence OR
    2. Meet Diagnostic Statistical Manual (DSM) criteria for Alcohol Abuse or dependence or have had one binge episode, specified by ≥5 drinks in one day, in the past 90 days and report alcohol use in the past 30 days.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Contraindications to MRI including ferromagnetic implants or claustrophobia
  • Meeting DSM criteria for dependence on illicit drugs other than marijuana or alcohol (use/abuse of other drugs will not be excluded)
  • Exhibit active psychosis, have severe medical or psychiatric illness limiting participation
  • Are pregnant or breast-feeding.

Piano di studio

Questa sezione fornisce i dettagli del piano di studio, compreso il modo in cui lo studio è progettato e ciò che lo studio sta misurando.

Come è strutturato lo studio?

Dettagli di progettazione

Coorti e interventi

Gruppo / Coorte
Nessun intervento

Cosa sta misurando lo studio?

Misure di risultato primarie

Misura del risultato
Misura Descrizione
Lasso di tempo
delay discounting
Lasso di tempo: Assessed at baseline
laboratory task assessing preference for immediate rewards
Assessed at baseline

Collaboratori e investigatori

Qui è dove troverai le persone e le organizzazioni coinvolte in questo studio.

Investigatori

  • Investigatore principale: Catherine Stanger, Ph.D., Dartmouth College

Pubblicazioni e link utili

La persona responsabile dell'inserimento delle informazioni sullo studio fornisce volontariamente queste pubblicazioni. Questi possono riguardare qualsiasi cosa relativa allo studio.

Studiare le date dei record

Queste date tengono traccia dell'avanzamento della registrazione dello studio e dell'invio dei risultati di sintesi a ClinicalTrials.gov. I record degli studi e i risultati riportati vengono esaminati dalla National Library of Medicine (NLM) per assicurarsi che soddisfino specifici standard di controllo della qualità prima di essere pubblicati sul sito Web pubblico.

Studia le date principali

Inizio studio

1 aprile 2010

Completamento primario (Effettivo)

1 maggio 2014

Completamento dello studio (Effettivo)

1 maggio 2014

Date di iscrizione allo studio

Primo inviato

23 marzo 2010

Primo inviato che soddisfa i criteri di controllo qualità

24 marzo 2010

Primo Inserito (Stima)

26 marzo 2010

Aggiornamenti dei record di studio

Ultimo aggiornamento pubblicato (Effettivo)

19 marzo 2018

Ultimo aggiornamento inviato che soddisfa i criteri QC

15 marzo 2018

Ultimo verificato

1 marzo 2018

Maggiori informazioni

Termini relativi a questo studio

Altri numeri di identificazione dello studio

  • 36824
  • 1R21DA029442-01 (Sovvenzione/contratto NIH degli Stati Uniti)

Piano per i dati dei singoli partecipanti (IPD)

Hai intenzione di condividere i dati dei singoli partecipanti (IPD)?

NO

Queste informazioni sono state recuperate direttamente dal sito web clinicaltrials.gov senza alcuna modifica. In caso di richieste di modifica, rimozione o aggiornamento dei dettagli dello studio, contattare register@clinicaltrials.gov. Non appena verrà implementata una modifica su clinicaltrials.gov, questa verrà aggiornata automaticamente anche sul nostro sito web .

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