Funded Projects
Explore our currently funded projects. You may search with all three fields, then focus your results by applying any of the dropdown filters. After customizing your search, you may download results and even save your specific search for later.
Project # | Project Title | Research Focus Area | Research Program | Administering IC | Institution(s) | Investigator(s) | Location(s) | Year Awarded |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1R01DA057631-01
Show Summary |
Motivational Interviewing and Mindfulness-Oriented Recovery Enhancement for Tobacco Dependence and Other Drug Use in Methadone Treatment | Translation of Research to Practice for the Treatment of Opioid Addiction | Improving Delivery of Healthcare Services for Polysubstance Use | NIDA | RBHS-ROBERT WOOD JOHNSON MEDICAL SCHOOL | COOPERMAN, NINA (contact); GARLAND, ERIC LEE | Piscataway, NJ | 2022 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Understanding Polysubstance Use and Improving Service Delivery to Address Polysubstance Use (R01 Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: DA22-047 Summary: Although approximately 80% of people with opioid use disorder smoke cigarettes, tobacco use is rarely addressed in treatment of opioid use disorder. Moreover, smoking cessation interventions that are effective in the general population have been minimally effective among people with opioid use disorder. This project will integrate into methadone treatment programs the Mindfulness-Oriented Recovery Enhancement intervention and motivational interviewing to address use of tobacco and other drugs. This research will determine the value of this intervention compared to attending a support group or receiving motivational interviewing. The project will also examine use of tobacco, opioids, and other drugs, and whether people begin treatment. The research will also study implementation barriers and facilitators to the mindfulness-based approach as well as strategies to enhance its adoption into clinical practice. |
||||||||
1R01DA057591-01
Show Summary |
Preferences and Predictors Driving Opioid-Involved Polysubstance Use Profiles and Trajectories: Implications for Improving Care | Translation of Research to Practice for the Treatment of Opioid Addiction | Improving Delivery of Healthcare Services for Polysubstance Use | NIDA | UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN | COUGHLIN, LARA NICOLE (contact); LIN, LEWEI ALLISON | Ann Arbor, MI | 2022 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Understanding Polysubstance Use and Improving Service Delivery to Address Polysubstance Use (R01 Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: DA22-047 Summary: Little is known about what motivates people to use multiple drugs. Understanding these factors is important for tailoring treatment services. Behavioral economic theory, which determines how much value individuals assign to drugs and potential negative consequences, provides a framework to understand the choices people make. This project will identify patterns, motivating factors, and long-term trajectories of opioid-involved polysubstance use behaviors and treatment. This research will use a range of methods to analyze substance use episodes as well as examine motives and preferences associated with polysubstance use behaviors and how they change over time. The findings will be combined into a toolkit to inform timing, type, and tailoring of interventions and policies to guide implementation of effective clinical strategies and policies for managing polysubstance use in healthcare systems. |
||||||||
1R34DA057609-01
Show Summary |
Patient Navigator plus Remote mHealth Adherence Support with Incentives to Improve Linkage and Retention among Hospitalized Patients with Opioid and Methamphetamine Use Who Initiate Buprenorphine | Translation of Research to Practice for the Treatment of Opioid Addiction | Improving Delivery of Healthcare Services for Polysubstance Use | NIDA | UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON | TSUI, JUDITH | Seattle, WA | 2022 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Pilot & Feasibility Trials to Improve Prevention and Treatment Service Delivery for Polysubstance Use (R34 Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: DA22-048 Summary: Patients who use both opioids and methamphetamine often experience serious medical complications requiring hospitalization. While hospitalization provides an opportunity to start addiction treatment, linking patients to outpatient treatment after discharge is hard. This project will develop and conduct a pilot trial of an intervention that combines patient navigation with a mobile app offering financial incentives for outpatient treatment. This research will also develop outcome measures to describe participants’ use of healthcare and how it is influenced by baseline methamphetamine use. If effective, this patient-navigator-plus-mHealth approach could help reduce substantial gaps in treatment and retention for people who use opioids and methamphetamines simultaneously. |
||||||||
1R01DA057608-01
Show Summary |
Treating Polysubstance Use in Methadone Maintenance: Application of Novel Digital Technology | Translation of Research to Practice for the Treatment of Opioid Addiction | Improving Delivery of Healthcare Services for Polysubstance Use | NIDA | FRIENDS RESEARCH INSTITUTE, INC. | MITCHELL, SHANNON GWIN | Baltimore, MD | 2022 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Understanding Polysubstance Use and Improving Service Delivery to Address Polysubstance Use (R01 Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: DA22-047 Summary: Although methadone is an effective treatment for opioid use disorder, many individuals drop out of treatment, putting them at risk of relapse and overdose. One of the factors associated with poor retention in methadone treatment is concurrent cocaine use. There is currently no effective medical treatment for cocaine use disorder. However, contingency management, in which individuals receive tangible rewards for desired behaviors such as abstinence, has been shown to be effective for cocaine use. This project will test the value of a digital therapy app, DynamiCare Health Contingency Management, in methadone treatment programs to promote treatment for polysubstance use. |
||||||||
1R34DA057678-01
Show Summary |
Adaption of the STAIR-NT Trauma Intervention for Polysubstance Populations | Translation of Research to Practice for the Treatment of Opioid Addiction | Improving Delivery of Healthcare Services for Polysubstance Use | NIDA | NEW YORK UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE | BUNTING, AMANDA M (contact); RENN, TANYA RAE | New York, NY | 2022 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Pilot & Feasibility Trials to Improve Prevention and Treatment Service Delivery for Polysubstance Use (R34 Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: DA22-048 Summary: Compared to people who use only one type of drug, people who use combinations of drugs, such as opioids and stimulants, are more likely to have histories of childhood trauma, including post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). This project will adapt an existing PTSD intervention, Skills Training in Affective and Interpersonal Regulation with Narrative Therapy, to treat individuals with polysubstance use. This research will be piloted in a methadone maintenance treatment program to assess feasibility and acceptability. If successful, the findings will lay the groundwork for a large-scale clinical trial. |
||||||||
1R01DA057672-01
Show Summary |
A Longitudinal Qualitative Study of Fentanyl-Stimulant Polysubstance Use Among People Experiencing Homelessness | Translation of Research to Practice for the Treatment of Opioid Addiction | Improving Delivery of Healthcare Services for Polysubstance Use | NIDA | YALE UNIVERSITY | MCNEIL, RYAN (contact); KNIGHT, KELLY RAY | New Haven, CT | 2022 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Understanding Polysubstance Use and Improving Service Delivery to Address Polysubstance Use (R01 Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: DA22-047 Summary: Compared to people with stable housing, individuals experiencing homelessness are more likely to use both fentanyl and stimulants and experience drug-related harms. This project will examine fentanyl-stimulant polysubstance use patterns and how they evolve over time in response to changes to housing status. It will also assess use of overdose prevention and substance use disorder treatment interventions in homeless individuals who use both fentanyl and stimulants, including how polysubstance use patterns shape their risk of overdose over time. This research will also interact with community stakeholders toward translating the findings into future research, policy, and program recommendations. |
||||||||
1R01DA057443-01
Show Summary |
Peer-Delivered, Behavioral Activation Intervention to Improve Polysubstance Use and Retention in Mobile Telemedicine OUD Treatment in an Underserved, Rural Area | Translation of Research to Practice for the Treatment of Opioid Addiction | Improving Delivery of Healthcare Services for Polysubstance Use | NIDA | UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND, COLLEGE PARK | MAGIDSON, JESSICA F (contact); KATTAKUZHY, SARAH M | College Park, MD | 2022 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Understanding Polysubstance Use and Improving Service Delivery to Address Polysubstance Use (R01 Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: DA22-047 Summary: Polysubstance use, especially use of both opioids and stimulants, is compounding the already devastating effects of the opioid crisis in underserved rural areas. This project builds on a previously established treatment model for opioid use disorder that uses telehealth and mobile treatment units, which seeks to engage people in activities they enjoy, to help them avoid negative behaviors such as drug use. This research will evaluate the effectiveness of a behavioral treatment approach delivered by peer recovery support specialists in rural areas and using mobile treatment units. The project will measure the intervention’s effect on treatment retention and polysubstance use – as well as evaluate the intervention’s feasibility, acceptability, adoption, and economic value. |
||||||||
1R34DA057639-01
Show Summary |
Leveraging Parents and Peer Recovery Supports to Increase Recovery Capital in Emerging Adults with Polysubstance Use: Feasibility, Acceptability, and Scaling Up of Launch | Translation of Research to Practice for the Treatment of Opioid Addiction | Improving Delivery of Healthcare Services for Polysubstance Use | NIDA | CHESTNUT HEALTH SYSTEMS | DRAZDOWSKI, TESS K | Eugene, OR | 2022 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Pilot & Feasibility Trials to Improve Prevention and Treatment Service Delivery for Polysubstance Use (R34 Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: DA22-048 Summary: Young adults (18 to 26) with a substance use problem have the highest rates of polysubstance use among all age groups. At the same time, individuals in this age group (especially in rural areas) are generally lacking in recovery capital: resources to help them recover from substance use, such as vocational or educational skills. This project will assess the feasibility and acceptability of “Launch,” which uses parental and peer recovery support to increase recovery capital for young adults with polysubstance use. The intervention will use coaching as well as contingency management, a treatment approach in which individuals receive tangible rewards as incentives for desired behaviors such as abstinence. If successful, the findings will inform a future large-scale trial assessing the effectiveness of this approach. |
||||||||
1R01DA057673-01
Show Summary |
The Short and Long-Term Dynamics of Opioid/Stimulant Use: Mixed Methods to Inform Overdose Prevention and Treatment Related to Polysubstance Use | Translation of Research to Practice for the Treatment of Opioid Addiction | Improving Delivery of Healthcare Services for Polysubstance Use | NIDA | JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY | GENBERG, BECKY LYNN (contact); GERMAN, DANIELLE | Baltimore, MD | 2022 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Understanding Polysubstance Use and Improving Service Delivery to Address Polysubstance Use (R01 Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: DA22-047 Summary: Use of both opioids and stimulants is increasing, but little is known about how polysubstance use evolves over time and how it influences overdose risk. This project will use data from two groups at high risk for overdose: i) participants in the AIDS Linked to the IntraVenous Experience (ALIVE) study who inject drugs and ii) participants in the new Stimulant Opioid Non-Injection Cohort (SONIC) study. This research will identify drug use patterns and their association with treatment and overdose over time – toward informing overdose prevention efforts and interventions to improve the U.S. opioid crisis. |