Assessing Screening Plus Brief Intervention's Resulting Efficacy (ASPIRE) to Stop Drug Use
NCT ID: NCT00876941
Last Updated: 2014-10-02
Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
PHASE3
589 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2009-04-30
2014-09-30
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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All subjects will be assessed regarding substance use and consequences, HIV risk behaviors, costs, healthcare utilization and receipt of substance dependence treatment. The primary outcome is drug use at 6 months; secondary outcomes are drug use consequences, including HIV risk behaviors, and receipt of substance dependence treatment (among those with dependence). We hypothesize that the standard BI and the enhanced BI will each have greater efficacy than screening and resource information alone for decreasing drug use, decreasing drug use consequences and HIV risk behaviors and increasing receipt of treatment for those with dependence.
Additionally, costs will also be compared. Results of this study re: efficacy and costs of brief intervention for drug use will be essential for making decisions about disseminating drug use SBI in primary care settings.
This study will enroll two cohorts:
1. We will enroll 450 subjects with an ASSIST Substance-Specific Involvement (SSI) Score of 4 or greater in order to test our primary hypotheses. Primary analyses (i.e., effect of each BI on unhealthy drug use) will be restricted to subjects with an ASSIST SSI Score of 4 or greater.
2. We will enroll an additional 200 subjects with an ASSIST SSI Score of 2 or 3, indicating some, but lower risk drug use. Patients with these scores are included in clinical interventions, but because there are no data on effectiveness in the literature, this cohort will not be included in primary analyses and instead will be included only in secondary and exploratory analyses. We will examine potential preventive effects of BI (either) on subjects with lower level drug use.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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Standard Brief Intervention
Standard Brief Intervention
Intervention: Structured, brief negotiated interview.
Intervention preparation and content: Preparation: review of ASSIST results; Content: The intervention involves 4 major parts: 1) establishing rapport and asking the subject for permission to raise the topic of drug use; 2) exploring the pros and cons of use; 3) providing feedback and assessing readiness to change; and 4) advising and negotiating a plan.
Counselor: Health Promotion Advocate, High School graduate or GED minimum Training specific to the brief intervention: Didactic and experiential; competency demonstrated by observation and/or video recordings which are content scored using a standardized form.
Contacts, Duration: One, 10-15 minutes.
Communication content delivered to primary care physician: Results of screening and BI.
Supervision: Weekly 1-hour meeting with supervisor to discuss job performance and discuss cases; biannual shadowing by supervisor.
Enhanced Brief Intervention
Enhanced Brief Intervention
Intervention: Less structured, motivational interview.
Intervention preparation and content: Preparation: review of ASSIST, drug consequences (SIP-D), risk behaviors, CIDI Short Form, and medical record for discussion; Content: Motivational interviewing discussing above.
Counselor: Master's level/Doctoral student.
Training specific to the brief intervention: Didactic and experiential, followed by additional work towards, and confirmation of, proficiency using audio recordings coded for motivational interviewing content.
Contacts, Duration: One plus offer of one optional booster contact, each 30-45 minutes; 2nd by telephone or in person depending on subject's preference; availability of counselor for further readiness discussions.
Communication content delivered to primary care physician: Results of screening, BI, and plan including follow-up.
Supervision: Weekly 1.5-hour meeting with supervisor with review of coded audio recordings.
Control
Control: Information and Feedback
Subjects randomized to the control group will not receive a BI at enrollment. But, all study subjects will receive screening and its results as part of the informed consent process (that they are at least at risk for drug use health hazards) along with a written list of resources available, including local options.
Interventions
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Standard Brief Intervention
Intervention: Structured, brief negotiated interview.
Intervention preparation and content: Preparation: review of ASSIST results; Content: The intervention involves 4 major parts: 1) establishing rapport and asking the subject for permission to raise the topic of drug use; 2) exploring the pros and cons of use; 3) providing feedback and assessing readiness to change; and 4) advising and negotiating a plan.
Counselor: Health Promotion Advocate, High School graduate or GED minimum Training specific to the brief intervention: Didactic and experiential; competency demonstrated by observation and/or video recordings which are content scored using a standardized form.
Contacts, Duration: One, 10-15 minutes.
Communication content delivered to primary care physician: Results of screening and BI.
Supervision: Weekly 1-hour meeting with supervisor to discuss job performance and discuss cases; biannual shadowing by supervisor.
Enhanced Brief Intervention
Intervention: Less structured, motivational interview.
Intervention preparation and content: Preparation: review of ASSIST, drug consequences (SIP-D), risk behaviors, CIDI Short Form, and medical record for discussion; Content: Motivational interviewing discussing above.
Counselor: Master's level/Doctoral student.
Training specific to the brief intervention: Didactic and experiential, followed by additional work towards, and confirmation of, proficiency using audio recordings coded for motivational interviewing content.
Contacts, Duration: One plus offer of one optional booster contact, each 30-45 minutes; 2nd by telephone or in person depending on subject's preference; availability of counselor for further readiness discussions.
Communication content delivered to primary care physician: Results of screening, BI, and plan including follow-up.
Supervision: Weekly 1.5-hour meeting with supervisor with review of coded audio recordings.
Control: Information and Feedback
Subjects randomized to the control group will not receive a BI at enrollment. But, all study subjects will receive screening and its results as part of the informed consent process (that they are at least at risk for drug use health hazards) along with a written list of resources available, including local options.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Arrived for a visit in primary care
* ASSIST Substance Specific Involvement Score of greater than or equal to 4 for subjects included in primary analyses; ASSIST Substance-Specific Involvement Scores of 2 or 3 for subjects included only in exploratory analyses
* No previous MASBIRT intervention in the past 3 months
* Fluent in English or Spanish
* Two contacts who can assist with locating the subject for follow-up
* Able to return to Boston Medical Center in the next 6 months for research study visits
* Not pregnant (because care systems and resources differ greatly for such subjects)
* Able to be interviewed by trained research staff (excluding those in acute discomfort or with significantly impaired cognition)
Exclusion Criteria
* NOT Arrived for a visit in primary care
* NO ASSIST Substance Specific Involvement Score of greater than or equal to 4 for subjects included in primary analyses; or NO ASSIST Substance-Specific Involvement Scores of 2 or 3 for subjects included only in exploratory analyses
* ANY previous MASBIRT intervention in the past 3 months
* NOT Fluent in English or Spanish
* FEWER THAN two contacts who can assist with locating the subject for follow-up
* NOT able to return to Boston Medical Center in the next 6 months for research study visits
* Pregnant (because care systems and resources differ greatly for such subjects)
* UN-Able to be interviewed by trained research staff (excluding those in acute discomfort or with significantly impaired cognition)
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
NIH
Boston University
OTHER
RTI International
OTHER
Boston Medical Center
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Richard Saitz, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Boston Medical Center
Locations
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Boston Medical Center
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Countries
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References
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Alford DP, German JS, Samet JH, Cheng DM, Lloyd-Travaglini CA, Saitz R. Primary Care Patients with Drug Use Report Chronic Pain and Self-Medicate with Alcohol and Other Drugs. J Gen Intern Med. 2016 May;31(5):486-91. doi: 10.1007/s11606-016-3586-5. Epub 2016 Jan 25.
Saitz R, Palfai TP, Cheng DM, Alford DP, Bernstein JA, Lloyd-Travaglini CA, Meli SM, Chaisson CE, Samet JH. Screening and brief intervention for drug use in primary care: the ASPIRE randomized clinical trial. JAMA. 2014 Aug 6;312(5):502-13. doi: 10.1001/jama.2014.7862.
Other Identifiers
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DESPR DA025068
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
Grant Number: 1R01DA025068
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: secondary_id
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