The goal of this research study supported by the HEAL Initiative (https://heal.nih.gov) is to investigate the effects transcutaneous auricular neurostimulation (tAN), as delivered through the Sparrow Ascent device, on helping people with co-occurring posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and opioid use disorder (OUD) start and continue buprenorphine treatment. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Does the tAN help participants with OUD and PTSD remain in buprenorphine therapy for three months after starting use of the device (i.e., randomization to treatment condition)? * Do participants find the Sparrow Ascent device to be acceptable and use it? * Do participants find the Sparrow Ascent device to be tolerable and comfortable to use? * Do participants find the Sparrow Ascent device to be easy to use with their buprenorphine therapy? * Do participants follow the minimum recommended dose schedule for the Sparrow Ascent device most of the time? Participants will complete a baseline assessment to make sure that they are eligible to participate in the study. The assessment captures information about demographics, substance use and treatment history, opioid withdrawal symptoms and craving, difficult life experiences and PTSD symptoms, mental health and treatment history, quality of life, and recovery resources. After the assessment is complete and the participant has been inducted on buprenorphine as part of standard care, they are randomized to one of two treatment conditions: active tAN and placebo. Participants are trained on how to use the device and return for 12 weekly research visits to check on recent substance use and craving, PTSD symptoms, and their experience using the device. After 12 weeks of using the device, participants will complete a post-active treatment assessment that is nearly identical to the baseline assessment to see if there have been changes in these areas. Researchers will access the medical record to determine whether there is a current prescription for buprenorphine at three months and six months after randomization.
Supported by the HEAL Initiative (https://heal.nih.gov), the overall UG3/UH3 phased project will test transcutaneous auricular neurostimulation (tAN) to the trigeminal and vagus nerves via the Sparrow Ascent device as an adjunct intervention to improve retention in buprenorphine treatment (BUP) for patients with co-occurring opioid use disorder and posttraumatic stress disorder. The specific objectives of the UG3 project are to: 1. conduct a pilot randomized, active sham-controlled test of transcutaneous auricular neurostimulation (tAN) with the Sparrow Ascent device to determine its acceptability, tolerability, feasibility, and adherence in patients with OUD and PTSD starting buprenorphine (BUP) therapy; 2. submit progress for review regarding study milestones and go/no-go criteria for approval of the UH3 phase; and 3. complete FDA pre-submission for FDA input on proposed UH3 protocols to expand Sparrow Ascent's indication for PTSD symptoms. Approximately twenty adults diagnosed with opioid use disorder and posttraumatic stress disorder initiating buprenorphine treatment will complete a baseline assessment of substance use and mental health diagnostic measures before being randomized into the study. Participants randomized to the active tAN condition will receive therapeutic stimulation to the trigeminal and vagus nerves through the Sparrow Ascent earpiece when they activate their Patient Controller. Participants randomized to the active sham condition will receive only stimulation on the trigeminal nerve at a level that can be felt but is well below any therapeutic effect. All participants will receive identical training for the Sparrow Ascent device and the only difference will be the condition-dependent programming of their Patient Controllers. Participants begin using the Sparrow Ascent device within 28 calendar days of buprenorphine induction. For the next 12 weeks, as they continue through standard buprenorphine treatment, participants will independently administer stimulation at or above a recommended dosage schedule that decreases in frequency every four weeks during the active participation period (i.e., Weeks 1-4, 5-8, 9-12). Device usage logs will be downloaded and assessed at weekly research visits throughout the active participation period to determine device adherence and provide feedback and assistance, if needed. After 12 weeks of device usage, participants return their device and complete a post-assessment that repeats many of the baseline assessments to determine changes from baseline. Buprenorphine treatment retention (primary outcome) at three months and six months (secondary outcome) post-randomization will be extracted from the electronic medical record.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
20
The Sparrow Ascent device from Spark Biomedical (Dallas, TX), applies stimulation frequencies of 15 Hz at the cymba concha (vagal innervation) and 100 Hz anterior to the tragus (trigeminal innervation). Both tAN and active sham conditions have square biphasic waveforms with identical pulse widths of 250 µs separated by a 125 µs interval between pulses. Stimulation is applied using a duty cycle of 5-minutes ON and 10 seconds OFF. The stimulation intensities (mA) will be programmed for each individual based on the highest amplitude for each channel that is both comfortable and perceptible. Patients using the device may alter the intensity of stimulation at these sites using the Patient Controller to achieve the desired effect.
The Sparrow Ascent Active Sham is a modified version of the Sparrow Ascent tAN System that has been designed to provide sub-therapeutic stimulation to the trigeminal nerve only and no stimulation to the vagus nerve. The trigeminal nerve will receive 1 Hz stimulation at the temporomandibular region at an amplitude that is comfortable and perceptual. The pulse duration will be set to a value that does not exceed 250 μs in a square biphasic waveform. The patient controller device for the active sham will give the appearance that stimulation is being applied at both vagal and trigeminal electrode sites.
Gibson Center for Behavioral Change
Cape Girardeau, Missouri, United States
3-month Buprenorphine (BUP) Retention
3-month BUP retention, operationalized as a current BUP prescription at the time of data extraction (retained/not retained), will be examined by observing the proportion of participants who are retained in BUP therapy at 3 months post-randomization.
Time frame: 3 months post-randomization
Device Acceptability
The proportion of participants registering use of the device.
Time frame: 3 months post-randomization
Device Tolerability
The proportions of participants endorsing that the device caused pain or discomfort to the ear, discontinue the study due to a device-related Adverse Event (AE), and any device-related Serious Adverse Events (SAEs).
Time frame: 3 months post-randomization
Device Feasibility - Patient Ease of Use
The proportion of participants who endorse that the device was easy to use as measured by the Device Usability Questionnaire using a five-item ordinal scale ranging from Strongly disagree to Strongly agree.
Time frame: 3 months post-randomization
Device Feasibility - Patient Helpfulness
The proportion of participants who endorse that the device helped them take their buprenorphine as prescribed as measured by the Device Usability Questionnaire using a five-item ordinal scale ranging from Strongly disagree to Strongly agree.
Time frame: 3 months post-randomization
Device Feasibility - Patient Value
The proportion of participants who endorse that the device is valuable for people with PTSD and OUD taking buprenorphine as measured by the Device Usability Questionnaire using a five-item ordinal scale ranging from Strongly disagree to Strongly agree.
Time frame: 3 months post-randomization
Device Feasibility - Provider Helpfulness
The proportion of provider reports of patient device usage endorsing that the device helped their participants take their buprenorphine as prescribed as measured by the Provider Feedback Questionnaire using a five-item ordinal scale ranging from Strongly disagree to Strongly agree.
Time frame: 3 months post-randomization
Device Feasibility - Provider Utility
The proportion of provider reports of patient device usage endorsing that the device has utility as an adjunct to buprenorphine therapy as measured by the Provider Feedback Questionnaire using a five-item ordinal scale ranging from Strongly disagree to Strongly agree.
Time frame: 3 months post-randomization
Device Feasibility - Provider Value
The proportion of provider reports of patient device usage endorsing that the device has value as a treatment option for patients with PTSD and OUD taking buprenorphine as measured by the Provider Feedback Questionnaire using a five-item ordinal scale ranging from Strongly disagree to Strongly agree.
Time frame: 3 months post-randomization
Device Feasibility - Provider Barrier
The proportion of provider reports of patient device usage endorsing that the device does not make it harder for their participant to take their medication as measured by the Provider Feedback Questionnaire using a five-item ordinal scale ranging from Strongly disagree to Strongly agree.
Time frame: 3 months post-randomization
Device Adherence
The proportion of participants who meet or exceed the minimum dosing schedule for at least 75% (9 of 12) weekly research visits.
Time frame: 3 months post-randomization
Buprenorphine Medication Compliance
The proportions of weekly research visits with a positive result for buprenorphine in the urine drug test and self-reported buprenorphine administration as prescribed.
Time frame: 3 months post-randomization
Substance Use
The proportions of weekly research visits with self-reported non-prescribed substance use (e.g., opioid use, stimulant use) as measured by the Timeline Follow-back Method and positive urine drug test results.
Time frame: 3 months post-randomization
PTSD Symptom Severity - Self Rated
Mean change in PTSD Checklist for DSM-5 (PCL-5) symptom severity scores from baseline to post-treatment assessment. PCL-5 scores range from 0 - 80 with a higher score indicating more severe trauma-related distress due to PTSD symptoms.
Time frame: 3 months post-randomization
PTSD Symptom Severity - Clinician Rated
Mean change in Clinician-administered PTSD Scale for DSM-5 (CAPS-5) symptom severity scores from baseline to post-treatment assessment. CAPS-5 scores range from 0 - 80 with a higher score indicating more severe trauma-related distress due to PTSD symptoms.
Time frame: 3 months post-randomization
PTSD Remission Status
Change in PTSD diagnostic status according to the Clinician-administered PTSD Scale for DSM-5 (CAPS-5).
Time frame: 3 months post-randomization
Opioid Withdrawal Symptom Severity - Self Rated
Mean change in self-reported opioid withdrawal symptom severity on the 10-item Short Opiate Withdrawal Scale - Gossop (SOWS-Gossop). Participants rate each item on a scale ranging from 0 (None) to 3 (Severe). The total scale score ranges between 0 - 30, with higher scores indicating more severe withdrawal symptoms.
Time frame: 3 months post-randomization
Opioid Withdrawal Symptom Severity - Observer Rated
Mean change in observer-rated severity on the 11-item Clinical Opiate Withdrawal Scale (COWS). The total score on the measure ranges from 0-48, with higher scores indicating greater severity of opioid withdrawal signs and symptoms.
Time frame: 3 months post-randomization
Opioid-related Craving
Mean change in self-reported opioid craving scores on the five-item Penn Craving Scale (PCS). Total scores on this measure range from 0 - 30, with higher scores indicating more severe craving for opioids.
Time frame: 3 months post-randomization
Overall Quality of Life and General Health
Mean change in self-reported Overall Quality of Life and General Health domain scores using the United States version of the World Health Organization (WHO) Quality of Life Scale - Brief. Participants rate items using a five-point Likert scale ranging from Not at all (1) to Completely (5). Raw scores within this domain range from 2-10. Higher scores indicate a higher overall quality of life and general health.
Time frame: 3 months post-randomization
Physical Health
Mean change in self-reported Physical Health domain scores using the United States version of the WHO Quality of Life Scale - Brief. Participants rate items using a five-point Likert scale ranging from Not at all (1) to Completely (5). Raw scores within this domain range from 7-35. Higher scores indicate a higher quality of physical health.
Time frame: 3 months post-randomization
Psychological Health
Mean change in self-reported Psychological domain scores using the United States version of the WHO Quality of Life Scale - Brief. Participants rate items using a five-point Likert scale ranging from Not at all (1) to Completely (5). Raw scores within this domain range from 6-30. Higher scores indicate a higher quality of psychological health.
Time frame: 3 months post-randomization
Quality of Social Relationships
Mean change in self-reported Social Relationships domain scores using the United States version of the WHO Quality of Life Scale - Brief. Participants rate items using a five-point Likert scale ranging from Not at all (1) to Completely (5). Raw scores within this domain range from 3-15. Higher scores indicate a higher quality of social relationships.
Time frame: 3 months post-randomization
Quality of Environment
Mean change in self-reported Environment domain scores using the United States version of the WHO Quality of Life Scale - Brief. Participants rate items using a five-point Likert scale ranging from Not at all (1) to Completely (5). Raw scores within this domain range from 8-40. Higher scores indicate a higher quality of environment.
Time frame: 3 months post-randomization
Recovery Capital
Mean change in self-reported recovery capital scores on the Brief Assessment of Recovery Capital - 10 (BARC-10). Scores on this measure range from 6-60, with higher scores indicating greater recovery capital and a higher likelihood of sustaining recovery from substance use disorder.
Time frame: 3 months post-randomization
Depression Symptom Severity
Mean change in self-reported depression symptom severity as measured by the Patient Health Questionnaire - 9 (PHQ-9). Scores on this measure range from 0-27, with higher scores indicating more severe depression-related distress.
Time frame: 3 months post-randomization
Anxiety Symptom Severity
Mean change in self-reported depression symptom severity as measured by General Anxiety Disorder - 7 (GAD-7). Scores on this measure range from 0-21, with higher scores indicating more severe anxiety-related distress.
Time frame: 3 months post-randomization
Blinding to Condition
The proportion of participants randomized to the comparison group who believe that they were in the active tAN condition.
Time frame: 3 months post-randomization
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