Post on 25-Feb-2016
description
2013 CTN Web Seminar Series
Produced by: NIDA CTN CCC Training Office"This training has been funded in whole or in part with Federal funds from the National Institute on Drug Abuse,
National Institutes of Health, Department of Health and Human Services, under Contract No.HHSN271201000024C."
DEVELOPING MEDICATION ASSISTED TREATMENT (MAT)
PROTOCOLSPresented by:
Andrew J. Saxon, MD
July 17, 2013
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Objectives:• Consider some of the prior medication assisted
treatment protocols conducted in the CTN for lessons learned.
• Identify design decisions that need to be made concerning medication assisted treatment protocols, including considerations about blinding and adherence strategies.
• Describe regulatory aspects of medication assisted treatment protocols.
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Trial
Med Treatment
Drug Product
Placebo
Treatment as usual
DESIGNING MEDICATION ASSISTED PROTOCOLS
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Specific Topics to Consider• Investigational New Drug Application (NDA) from
FDA?• Open label or blinded MAT trial?• Placebo or active comparator?• Dosing strategy—Fixed or flexible?• Adherence strategy?• More exclusive or more inclusive enrollment
criteria?• What, if any, behavioral platform?• Safety monitoring plan
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REGULATORY CONSIDERATIONS
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IND• An Investigator IND is submitted by a physician
who both initiates and conducts an investigation, and under whose immediate direction the investigational drug is administered or dispensed. A physician might submit a research IND to propose studying an unapproved drug, or an approved product for a new indication or in a new patient population.
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IND• CDER's
Pre-Investigational New Drug Application (IND) Consultation Program5 fosters early communications between sponsors and new drug review divisions to provide guidance on the data necessary to warrant IND submission. The review divisions are organized generally along therapeutic class and can each be contacted using the designated Pre-IND Consultation List (PDF - 19KB)6.
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IND Examples• Injectable risperidone for methamphetamine
dependence– Drug company sponsor – wanted IND– Use in new population – FDA requested IND
• Prazosin for Alcohol Dependence– University/NIH sponsor – no position on IND– Given widespread use of prazosin, has probably been
used by patients with AUD– No plans to seek a change in labeling or advertising– Exempt from IND
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Controlled Substances
• Obtain appropriate DEA licensure
• Obtain licensure specific to each state
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BLINDING AND PLACEBO STRATEGIES
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Open Label vs. Blinded Study
Enck et al., 2013
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Open Label Advantages• Good for pilot studies to test:
– tolerability– safety– possibly dose effects
• More real world• For some medications expectancies are
component of efficacy– Disulfiram (Antabuse)
• Less complex/costly
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Blinding Advantage• Accounts for expectancy effects
– Patients– Research staff
• Double blind vs. single blind
Benedetti et al., 2005
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Placebo Response
Benedetti et al., 2005
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Placebo vs. Active Comparator• If active medication has profound, observable
effects, inert placebo may break blind
• Active “placebo” possible
• If an already approved medication for indication exists, head to head comparison informative
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PRIOR MEDICATION ASSISTED TREATMENT PROTOCOLS
Lessons Learned in the CTN
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START Study Schema1920 Number screened for participation
1269 Randomized
740 Buprenorphine/Naloxone 529 Methadone
340 Evaluable400 Failed to remain on assigned
medication for 24 wks0 Failed to provide ≥ 4 LT
samples
391 Evaluable 136 Failed to remain on assigned
medication for 24 wks2 Failed to provide ≥ 4 LT samples
261 Completed 32-week follow-up 330 Completed 32-week follow-up
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CTN 0028 OROS-Methylphenidate ADHD/SUD
Riggs et al., 2011
Titrated to 72 mg per day
CTN 0048 CURB Study Schema
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Fixed vs. Flexible Dosing• Fixed dosing
– requires less physician time– Fixed dosing may miss optimum dose
• Flexible dosing– Titrate to effects/side effects– Need algorithm to guide study physician– More real world– More complex analytic approach may be needed
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CTN 0003 Buprenorphine TaperTaper Group Total
7 day taper 28 day taper
Stabilization Dose
8 mg 22 26 48 (9.3%)
16 mg 68 73 141 (27.3%)
24 mg 165 162 327 (63.4%)
Total 255 (49.4%) 261 (50.6%) 516 (100%)
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ADHERENCE STRATEGIES
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Potential Adherence Measures• Observed dosing• Pill counts• Biologic marker• Electronic monitoring• Self report• Plasma or urine drug concentrations
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PRIOR MEDICATION ASSISTED TREATMENT PROTOCOLS
Lessons Learned in the CTN
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0053 Achieving Cannabis Cessation - Evaluating N-Acetylcysteine Treatment (ACCENT)
• The primary objective is to evaluate impact of N-acetylcysteine (NAC) 1200 mg versus matched placebo (PBO) twice daily, added to compliance enhancement (CE) and contingency management (CM), on cannabis use among treatment-seeking cannabis-dependent adults.
• Medication adherence will be assessed using self-report, blister pack pill counts, and urine riboflavin testing.
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0052 Randomized Controlled Evaluation of Buspirone for Relapse-Prevention in Adults with Cocaine Dependence (BRAC)
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0052 Randomized Controlled Evaluation of Buspirone for Relapse-Prevention in Adults with Cocaine Dependence (BRAC)
• The primary objective is to evaluate the efficacy of buspirone, relative to placebo, in preventing relapse in cocaine-dependent adults in inpatient/residential treatment who are planning to enter outpatient treatment upon inpatient/residential discharge.
• MEMS, pill count, and participant self-report of medication adherence will be collected.
• Urine samples will be shipped to a central lab, and samples from the buspirone group will be assayed for buspirone and/or its metabolite.
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MEMS• The Medication Event Monitoring System, (MEMS) is a
medication bottle cap with a microprocessor that records the occurrence and time of each bottle opening.
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INCLUSION/EXCLUSION STRATEGIES
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Enrollment Criteria• More restrictive
– Increase safety– Possibly increase likelihood of effect
• Less restrictive– Increase generalizability– Interventions found efficacious in clinical trials often
fail in real world
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PRIOR MEDICATION ASSISTED TREATMENT PROTOCOLS
Lessons Learned in the CTN
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Exclusions 0027 START
• ALT or AST values > 5 times the upper limit of normal
• Known diagnosis of acute psychosis, severe depression or imminent suicide risk
• Poor venous access such that venipuncture could not be accomplished from a vein in an extremity during eligibility
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Exclusions 0052 BRAC• Medical or psychiatric condition that, in the
judgment of the study physician, would make study participation unsafe or which would make treatment compliance difficult. Medical conditions that may compromise participant safety or study conduct include, but are not limited to: – AIDS – liver function tests greater than 3X upper limit of normal – serum creatinine greater than 2 mg/dL
• Psychiatric disorder requiring continued treatment with a psychotropic medication
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Potential Behavioral Platforms• Medications alone not expected to be fully
efficacious for SUD
• More intensive behavioral intervention– Could overwhelm medication effects– Could provide sufficient support and/or synergy to
allow medication to work• Less intensive behavioral intervention
– Less likely to overwhelm medication effects– May not hold patients in treatment sufficiently to
allow medication to work
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PRIOR MEDICATION ASSISTED TREATMENT PROTOCOLS
Lessons Learned in the CTN
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Behavioral Interventions from CTN MAT Trials
• Bup Taper and START – Counseling as usual
• OROS-methylphenidate ADHD/SUD– CBT (highly efficacious)
• ACCENT– compliance enhancement (CE) and contingency
management (CM)
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CTN 0028 OROS-Methylphenidate ADHD/SUD
Riggs et al., 2011
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SAFETY MONITORING
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Safety Monitoring
• Data Safety Monitoring Board– Established for CTN MAT Trials
• Plan to assess adverse events and serious adverse events
• Laboratory monitoring– e.g., liver tests, glucose, CBC
• Cardiac monitoring– ECG
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Recap / Highlights
• Designing MAT trials involves numerous decision points and trade-offs
• MAT trials conducted in CTN can provide considerable guidance in making these decisions for design of future MAT trials
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Q&A – Questions / Comments
Alternatively, questions can be directed to the presenter by sending an email to CTNtraining@emmes.com.
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References• Saxon et al., Buprenorphine/Naloxone and methadone
effects on laboratory indices of liver health: A randomized trial. Drug and Alcohol Dependence 128:71-76, 2013.
• Riggs et al., Randomized controlled trial of osmotic-release methylphenidate with cognitive-behavioral therapy in adolescents with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder and substance use disorders. Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry 50:903-914, 2011.
• Ling et al., Buprenorphine tapering schedule and illicit opioid use. Addiction 104:256-265, 2009.
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Social Media – Using Social Media as a Clinical Trials Research Tool
Wednesday, August 21, 20131:00 pm to 2:00 pm ET
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A copy of this presentation will be available electronically after this session.
http://ctndisseminationlibrary.org
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Thank you for participating.NIDA CTN Web Seminar Series