The Whole Health Study: Collaborative Care for OUD and Mental Health Conditions
NCT ID: NCT04245423
Last Updated: 2025-04-06
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
NA
567 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2020-12-15
2026-02-28
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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a) Augmented Usual Care (AUC), which consists of a primary care physician (PCP) waivered to prescribe buprenorphine, a mental health care manager, and an addiction psychiatrist to consult on Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT); b) Collaborative Care (CC), which consists of a waivered PCP, a mental health care manager who receives OUD training, and a psychiatrist who provides telephonic consultation for OUD and mental health; or c) Collaborative Care Plus (CC+), which consists of all the elements of CC, plus a Certified Recovery Specialist (CRS) to help with patient engagement in treatment and retention in care;
(3) Measure clinician- level factors associated with implementation of each component and metrics of fidelity and reach, our primary implementation outcomes of interest; and (4) Assess the costs to primary care practices of implementing and delivering AUC, CC and CC+ and the change in total healthcare costs associated with the implementation. Successful completion of the proposed study will provide definitive evidence regarding the most parsimonious set of elements of integrated collaborative care required to maximize outcomes for individuals with OUD and psychiatric disorders.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
FACTORIAL
TREATMENT
SINGLE
Study Groups
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Augmented Usual Care (AUC)
If not already waivered, PCPs will be trained and waivered to treat OUD with medications. Almost all practices have hired mental health clinicians, equivalent to the care managers in the investigators' collaborative care model, to treat mild and moderate depression and anxiety. These clinicians typically are licensed clinical social workers; a few are nurses or psychologists. No care managers have received systematic training in treating patients with OUD. The clinicians will retain their role and continue to treat and monitor patients with mental health conditions in these practices. Other than that, the research team will provide no support to the PCP or practice staff. However, an addiction psychiatrist is available for consultation for OUD. Patients are informed that the primary care practice provides both OUD and mental health treatment and are referred back to their provider for referral or to schedule care. A list of available community resources are available to the patient.
Augmented Usual Care
If not already waivered, PCPs will be trained and waivered to treat OUD with medications. All practices will have mental health clinicians to treat mild psychiatric disorders. Other than that, the research team will provide no support to the PCP or practice staff. However, an addiction psychiatrist is available for consultation for OUD.
Collaborative Care (CC)
CC condition includes the following elements:
1. Personnel trained to assist with scheduling, reminders and referrals;
2. PCP trained and waivered to provide evidence-based pharmacotherapy for OUD;
3. Addictions psychiatrist with collaborative care expertise to provide treatment consultation and supervision in both OUD and mental health issues;
4. A care manager trained in evidence-based interventions for individuals with OUD and psychiatric disorders, who provides care in the primary care practice as part of the collaborative care team;
5. Measurement-guided care and treat-to-target practices, using validated measures of substance use, depression, anxiety as well as measures of adherence and side effects;
6. Electronic and in-person systematic communication regarding patient care among team members, facilitated by the electronic health record; and
7. Shared patient-provider decision making.
Collaborative Care for Opioid Use Disorders and Mental Health Conditions
CC is delivered using the investigators' Foundations for Integrated Care model. The first line pharmacotherapy is buprenorphine-naloxone. The second line pharmacotherapy included is extended-release injectable naltrexone. Pharmacotherapy is accompanied by brief problem-solving therapy, cognitive-behavioral therapy, and/or motivational interviewing. The primary care physician, in consultation with the addictions psychiatrist and care manager, also will provide psychotropic medications for psychiatric disorders. In-person and telephone visits consist of the care manager carrying out intervention activities over 6 months. Visits are at baseline (90-minute intake appointment), home or office induction when in moderate opiate withdrawal if buprenorphine is prescribed, twice a week for two weeks with telephone calls in between visits, then weekly, and when stable once a month. There will be a final visit at 6 months. The intervention includes routine collection of urine drug screens.
Collaborative Care + Certified Recovery Specialist (CC+)
In addition to the collaborative care model described above, patients in the CC+ condition will have access to a Certified Recovery Specialist (CRS) to assist with treatment engagement and retention. A CRS is a person in the community who is in recovery and may share similar experiences and barriers that participants have faced. They will work with participants as a peer to help them coordinate information and needs with their providers. The CRS will take participants to their PCP appointments and any other appointments that they may have to help them engage and stay in care to remain healthy. They will also provide education and help participants work on their recovery goals. They will identify and support linkages to community resources and help participants identify barriers to full participation in their recovery and develop strategies to overcome those barriers.
Collaborative Care for Opioid Use Disorders and Mental Health Conditions Plus Certified Recovery Specialists
This intervention includes the Collaborative Care Intervention plus Certified Recovery Specialist to assist with treatment engagement and retention.
Interventions
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Collaborative Care for Opioid Use Disorders and Mental Health Conditions
CC is delivered using the investigators' Foundations for Integrated Care model. The first line pharmacotherapy is buprenorphine-naloxone. The second line pharmacotherapy included is extended-release injectable naltrexone. Pharmacotherapy is accompanied by brief problem-solving therapy, cognitive-behavioral therapy, and/or motivational interviewing. The primary care physician, in consultation with the addictions psychiatrist and care manager, also will provide psychotropic medications for psychiatric disorders. In-person and telephone visits consist of the care manager carrying out intervention activities over 6 months. Visits are at baseline (90-minute intake appointment), home or office induction when in moderate opiate withdrawal if buprenorphine is prescribed, twice a week for two weeks with telephone calls in between visits, then weekly, and when stable once a month. There will be a final visit at 6 months. The intervention includes routine collection of urine drug screens.
Augmented Usual Care
If not already waivered, PCPs will be trained and waivered to treat OUD with medications. All practices will have mental health clinicians to treat mild psychiatric disorders. Other than that, the research team will provide no support to the PCP or practice staff. However, an addiction psychiatrist is available for consultation for OUD.
Collaborative Care for Opioid Use Disorders and Mental Health Conditions Plus Certified Recovery Specialists
This intervention includes the Collaborative Care Intervention plus Certified Recovery Specialist to assist with treatment engagement and retention.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. a diagnosis of opioid use disorder using DSM-5 criteria within the last 12 months OR have taken medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD) within the last 12 months;
3. agree to receive medication for opioid use disorder at the primary care site (the first line pharmacotherapy is buprenorphine-naloxone and the second line pharmacotherapy will include extended-release injectable naltrexone);
4. meet criteria for depression, anxiety (panic disorder, social anxiety disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, or generalized anxiety disorder), or PTSD;
5. able to communicate in English; and
6. willing to give informed consent.
Exclusion Criteria
2. lack of a phone.
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Weill Medical College of Cornell University
OTHER
University of Pennsylvania
OTHER
Responsible Party
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David Mandell
Kenneth E. Appel Professor and Director, Penn Center for Mental Health
Principal Investigators
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David Mandell, ScD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
University of Pennsylvania
Locations
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Penn Center for Primary Care
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Countries
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References
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Harris RA, Campbell K, Calderbank T, Dooley P, Aspero H, Maginnis J, O'Donnell N, Coviello D, French R, Bao Y, Mandell DS, Bogner HR, Lowenstein M. Integrating peer support services into primary care-based OUD treatment: Lessons from the Penn integrated model. Healthc (Amst). 2022 Sep;10(3):100641. doi: 10.1016/j.hjdsi.2022.100641. Epub 2022 Jul 2.
Harris RA, Mandell DS, Kampman KM, Bao Y, Campbell K, Cidav Z, Coviello DM, French R, Livesey C, Lowenstein M, Lynch KG, McKay JR, Oslin DW, Wolk CB, Bogner HR. Collaborative care in the treatment of opioid use disorder and mental health conditions in primary care: A clinical study protocol. Contemp Clin Trials. 2021 Apr;103:106325. doi: 10.1016/j.cct.2021.106325. Epub 2021 Feb 22.
Provided Documents
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Document Type: Informed Consent Form
Other Identifiers
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