The goal of this clinical trial is to to inhibit the anterior insula (AI) with low intensity focused ultrasound (LIFU) to determine the causal role for the AI in pain processing, anxiety, and opiate cue-induced craving. The main question\[s\] it aims to answer are: * the safety and tolerability of LIFU delivered bilaterally to AI compared to sham stimulation in individuals with opiate use disorder (OUD), anxiety, and chronic back pain * the effects of LIFU vs sham on measures of pain processing, anxiety symptoms, and opiate cue-induced craving Participants will undergo anatomical MRI, neurological assessment, clinical assessment and patient query to assess the safety and tolerability of LIFU vs sham.
Opioid use disorder with co-morbid chronic pain and anxiety is a clinical triad associated with the highest risk of opiate overdose deaths. Co-occurrence of these three disorders amplifies symptoms of each and results in poorer treatment outcomes. There are shared neurobiological substrates for these disorders such as reward processing and stress response. The anterior insula (AI) is a brain region involved in these processes as well as in clinical disorder of pain, addiction, and anxiety. The AI is upregulated in pain, addiction and anxiety disorders and is therefore a potential therapeutic target for neuromodulation. Low-intensity focused ultrasound (LIFU) is a noninvasive method to inhibit cortical and deep brain regions. LIFU can reach deep brain regions such as the AI with spatial specificity, unlike traditional noninvasive neuromodulation methods which lack spatial specificity and depth penetration. LIFU can selectively target the insula and its subregions and provides a potentially transformative method to reduce symptoms of pain, opiate craving, and anxiety in a complex patient population such as co-morbid chronic pain, anxiety, and opioid use disorder. In this study, the investigators will administer one session of inhibitory LIFU to the AI in individuals with opiate use disorder, chronic back pain, and anxiety disorders (generalized anxiety disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder, or social anxiety disorder)\]. The aim of this phase of the study is to establish that LIFU vs sham LIFU to AI is safe and well tolerated as measured by adverse events, clinical evaluation and repeated structural brain magnetic resonance imaging scans. The investigators will also gather preliminary data on the effect of LIFU to AI on opiate cue-induced craving and laboratory measures of central sensitization(CS) which occurs with pain chronicity such as temporal summation of pain and conditioned pain modulation. There is a need for improved treatments for complex patients such as co-morbid chronic back pain, anxiety, and opioid use disorder beyond combining treatments for each disorder. LIFU provides an ability to transiently and selectively inhibit AI to determine its causal role in co-morbid chronic back pain, anxiety, and opioid use disorder symptoms which then may lead to improved treatments for this clinical triad which is associated with poor treatment outcomes.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
25
Low-intensity focused ultrasound (LIFU) provides an energy source with millimeter resolution that can be focused anywhere in the brain safely and effectively for non-invasive and transient neuromodulation. LIFU is an important advance and of great significance for brain-mapping efforts, diagnostics, and therapies in neuroscience and particularly promising for addiction therapy as it provides unprecedented non-surgical access to the brain regardless of depth. Much lower intensities of focused ultrasound (LIFU) are used so that tissue damage does not occur, but neural activity can be modulated. LIFU utilizes acoustic energy at much lower levels to affect tissue by mechanical effects.
Washington DC Veterans Affairs Medical Center
Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States
RECRUITINGIncidence of Treatment-Emergent Adverse Events
number of adverse events
Time frame: immediately prior to 1 session low-intensity focused ultrasound (LIFU) and within 1 hour post LIFU; immediately prior to 1 session sham and with in 1 hour post sham
Heart rate variability
Continuous heart rate variability monitoring
Time frame: immediately prior to 1 session low-intensity focused ultrasound (LIFU) and within 1 hour post LIFU; immediately prior to 1 session sham and with in 1 hour post sham
Pain threshold
Numeric Pain Rating Scale (NPRS) Score: 0-10 0 = 'No pain' 10 = 'Worst pain imaginable'
Time frame: immediately prior to 1 session low-intensity focused ultrasound (LIFU) and within 1 hour post LIFU; immediately prior to 1 session sham and with in 1 hour post sham
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