Tundra Space

Tundra Space

Clinical Research Directory

Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.

4 clinical studies listed.

Filters:

Drug Addiction

Tundra lists 4 Drug Addiction clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.

This data is also available as a public JSON API. AI systems and LLMs are encouraged to use it for structured queries.

RECRUITING

NCT03745339

Outcome Inference in the Sensory Preconditioning Task in Opioid-Use Disorder

Background: People with addictions often find it hard to choose the long-term benefits of abstinence over the short-term effects of using drugs. Researchers think this is partly due to parts of the brain involved in certain types of learning and decision-making. Researchers want to test these basic functions using a simple task with pictures and odors. Objective: To see if performance in a learning task differs between people who have opioid-use disorder and people who don t. Eligibility: Adults 21-60 years old who are willing to fast for at least 6 hours and smell food odors. Those with an opioid-use disorder must either not use for at least 3 weeks or be in treatment. Design: Participants will have 1 visit that will take up to 5 hours. Before the visit, participants will be asked to not eat or drink anything except water for at least 6 hours. At the visit, participants will be checked for signs of intoxication. Participants will give urine and breath samples. Participants will have tests of learning and behavior. They will look at shapes on a computer screen. The shapes will be paired with different food odors. The odors will come from a sterile tube placed under the nose. Participants will have their breathing monitored with a belt around the upper abdomen. About 30 days and 60 days later, participants will be called and asked about their drug use over the past 30 days.

Gender: All

Ages: 21 Years - 60 Years

Updated: 2026-04-06

1 state

Opioid-Related Disorders
Drug Addiction
RECRUITING

NCT07033728

The Health of Women Monitored in the Addiction Department of the Strasbourg University Hospitals

The health of women suffering from addiction is little known and little explored in the literature. Indeed, they represent only 20% of addicted patients in general and are encountered primarily during pregnancy or complex situations involving young children. In the Addiction Department of Strasbourg University Hospitals, the investigators have established a midwifery consultation exclusively for women of all ages. During the treatment of the women, the investigators were able to identify the specific issues faced by women suffering from addiction and the specific care requirements for this population.

Gender: FEMALE

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-06-24

Drug Addiction
RECRUITING

NCT05534815

Long-Term Treatment of Opioid Use Disorder

Poverty and opioid addiction are interrelated and chronic problems which have not been addressed adequately. The Therapeutic Workplace could treat the many adults with opioid use disorder who are unemployed and live in poverty. The Therapeutic Workplace pays participants to work. To promote drug abstinence, the Therapeutic Workplace arranges employment-based abstinence reinforcement in which participants are required to provide drug-free urine samples to maintain maximum wages. Many studies have shown that employment-based abstinence reinforcement in the Therapeutic Workplace can promote and maintain drug abstinence. Recently, the investigators showed that abstinence-contingent wage supplements in the Therapeutic Workplace could promote drug abstinence and employment and reduce poverty. However, the investigators have not demonstrated the real-world impacts of the Therapeutic Workplace. The Therapeutic Workplace requires two modifications to produce real world impacts. 1. The investigators must develop a real-world version of the Therapeutic Workplace that community treatment programs can implement. 2. The investigators must reduce the costs of maintaining employment-based abstinence reinforcement. This application seeks to develop and evaluate a low-cost Therapeutic Workplace that community treatment programs can implement and that addresses the persistent nature of opioid addiction and poverty. The investigators propose to conduct a Stage III study in which a community clinic (REACH Health Services) adapts and implements the Therapeutic Workplace intervention. To improve the feasibility of this intervention, the investigators will use low-cost abstinence-contingent wage supplements to maintain abstinence. The investigators propose to conduct a randomized controlled study to evaluate the effectiveness of the low-cost abstinence-contingent wage supplements in a community Therapeutic Workplace to maintain long-term drug abstinence and employment, and to reduce poverty in adults with opioid use disorder. All participants will be invited to attend a 4-week induction period and 48 weeks of support by an employment specialist. At the end of a 4-week induction period, REACH unemployed methadone or buprenorphine patients with opioid use disorder who meet the Induction Period inclusion criteria (N=225) will be randomly assigned to a "Usual Care Control," an "Initiation Only," or an "Initiation and Maintenance" group. All groups will be offered methadone or buprenorphine treatment and an employment specialist for 48 weeks. "Initiation Only" and "Initiation and Maintenance" participants will earn high magnitude abstinence-contingent wage supplements during a 24-week Initiation period (weeks 1-24). "Initiation and Maintenance" participants will also earn low-magnitude abstinence-contingent wage supplements during a 24-week Maintenance period (weeks 25-48). The investigators will base the primary outcome measures on assessments conducted every four weeks of the Maintenance period. If low-cost abstinence-contingent wage supplements in the community Therapeutic Workplace maintain drug abstinence and employment and decrease poverty, community drug abuse treatment clinics could apply this intervention widely as a long-term maintenance treatment for unemployed adults with opioid use disorder.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-05-02

1 state

Drug Addiction
Employment
ENROLLING BY INVITATION

NCT06888700

Project on tDCS Intervention to Enhance Advanced Social Cognitive Functions in Drug Rehabilitation Individuals

This project aims to explore key brain functional and biochemical indicators associated with impaired advanced social cognition through an integrated approach encompassing unconscious control, conscious control, cognitive flexibility, problem-solving, and social interaction domains. By incorporating multimodal measures spanning physiological, neural, cognitive, psychological, and behavioral dimensions, we will develop a comprehensive intervention protocol combining course-based brain stimulation and cognitive training. The study will employ a multi-timepoint, multi-level assessment framework to track the enhancement of higher cognitive functions and brain functional recovery in individuals undergoing drug rehabilitation.

Gender: All

Ages: 30 Years - 60 Years

Updated: 2025-03-21

1 state

Drug Addiction