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RECRUITING
NCT06454903
NA

Developing a Smartphone Application to Support Veteran Opioid Use Disorder Treatment

Sponsor: VA Office of Research and Development

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Opioid Use Disorder (OUD) is a complex, chronic condition affecting nearly 70,000 Veterans who can experience significantly reduced quality of life (e.g., poorer social, occupational, and health-related functioning). VA clinics providing Medication treatment for OUD (MOUD; e.g., buprenorphine, methadone), the 1st-line treatment for OUD, often face challenges in also attempting to treat Veteran functional needs, which may require them to extend beyond their available resources to provide support. There is an urgent need for functionally impactful and accessible treatments for Veterans in MOUD. Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) is a well-suited framework to support the functioning of Veterans in MOUD with over 20 years of research support. However, the traditional practice ACT requires a trained clinician to provide weekly, hour-long therapy sessions (typically for 12-16 weeks) and may be too burdensome for MOUD clinics to use alongside standard care. Fortunately, emerging research suggests that mobile health interventions (MHIs; e.g., smartphone apps) can overcome many of these pragmatic barriers. MHIs can efficiently deliver functionally-focused treatments focused on Veteran functioning in "real-world" settings, through minimally burdensome and accessible formats. Currently however, no MHI's targeting functioning exist for Veterans in MOUD. The proposed study will address this gap by developing and evaluating an early prototype of a targeted smartphone app designed to enhance the functional outcomes of Veterans receiving MOUD called "ACT to RECOVER" (Acceptance and Commitment Therapy to Reach Empowerment through Commitment, Openness, and Valuing Experiences in Recovery). The study will occur in 3 phases: Phase 1: Development. Develop content for ACT to RECOVER using Veteran (n=10) and provider feedback (n=10). Phase 2: Iterative Usability Assessment. Conduct field testing (3 rounds, n=4-5 per round) to refine ACT to RECOVER format, acceptability, and usability. Phase 3: Pilot ACT to RECOVER in a Stage 1b Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT). Conduct a pilot trial to compare ACT to RECOVER (n=20) to a smartphone-based symptom monitoring control group (n=20). * (3a) Evaluate the acceptability and feasibility of each condition's app and study procedures. * (3b) Explore changes in functional (e.g., values-based living, quality of life) and clinical outcomes (e.g., illicit opioid use) which will be key outcomes in future efficacy testing.

Official title: Developing a Smartphone Application to Support the Functional Needs of Veterans in Medication Treatment for Opioid Use Disorder

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

75

Start Date

2025-04-02

Completion Date

2029-09-30

Last Updated

2025-08-27

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

ACT to RECOVER

During Phase 3 (Stage 1b RCT), the treatment condition will employ ACT to RECOVER. ACT to RECOVER will be a smartphone app designed to act as a flexible, semi-structured, user-friendly adjunct to standard medication treatment for opioid use disorder. Content will include components appropriate for either self-management and/or use with providers. ACT to RECOVER will be designed to have major ACT-focused modules completable within 1 month.

BEHAVIORAL

Smartphone-based Symptom-Monitoring

During Phase 3 (Stage 1b RCT), the control condition will employ a smartphone-based symptom monitoring program in an effort to provide a balanced alternative to the treatment condition with respect to attention, time using a mobile application, and nonspecific intervention effects. This condition will not, however, include any content or components from the Prototype Digital Intervention hypothesized to produce active clinical effects.

Locations (1)

VA Connecticut Healthcare System West Haven Campus, West Haven, CT

West Haven, Connecticut, United States