| Literature DB >> 32313696 |
Linda B Cottler1, Alan I Green2, Harold Alan Pincus3, Scott McIntosh4,5, Jennifer L Humensky3, Kathleen Brady6.
Abstract
The opioid crisis in the USA requires immediate action through clinical and translational research. Already built network infrastructure through funding by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) and National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS) provides a major advantage to implement opioid-focused research which together could address this crisis. NIDA supports training grants and clinical trial networks; NCATS funds the Clinical and Translational Science Award (CTSA) Program with over 50 NCATS academic research hubs for regional clinical and translational research. Together, there is unique capacity for clinical research, bioinformatics, data science, community engagement, regulatory science, institutional partnerships, training and career development, and other key translational elements. The CTSA hubs provide unprecedented and timely response to local, regional, and national health crises to address research gaps [Clinical and Translational Science Awards Program, Center for Leading Innovation and Collaboration, Synergy paper request for applications]. This paper describes opportunities for collaborative opioid research at CTSA hubs and NIDA-NCATS opportunities that build capacity for best practices as this crisis evolves. Results of a Landscape Survey (among 63 hubs) are provided with descriptions of best practices and ideas for collaborations, with research conducted by hubs also involved in premier NIDA initiatives. Such collaborations could provide a rapid response to the opioid epidemic while advancing science in multiple disciplinary areas. © The Association for Clinical and Translational Science 2019.Entities:
Keywords: CTSA Program; NIDA; Opioid use disorder; opioid crisis; opioid use; synergy; translational science
Year: 2019 PMID: 32313696 PMCID: PMC7159806 DOI: 10.1017/cts.2019.441
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Transl Sci ISSN: 2059-8661
Research priority areas of National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) and National Center for Advancing Translational Science (NCATS)
| Research domain | Priority areas |
|---|---|
|
| Non-opioid analgesics: cannabinoids, anti-inflammatory medications, ion channel blockers |
| Targeted opioid analgesics | |
| Biologics: antibodies that bind to pain producing cytokines | |
| Non-pharmacologic treatments: Neural stimulation; surgical intervention, meditation, etc. | |
|
| Mapping differences in the brain |
| Medication-assisted treatment (MAT) | |
| Emergency department initiated buprenorphine | |
| Naltrexone treatment for criminal justice populations | |
| Fentanyl vaccine | |
|
| More widespread naloxone distribution |
| Stronger, longer acting formulations for more potent opioids | |
| Devices to stop respiratory depression | |
| Overdose detection and alert technologies | |
| Linkage to treatment after over dose (OD) |
Capacity by domain, activity type, general approach, and number of Clinical and Translational Science (CTSA) program hubs mentioning that domain among the 45 hubs that responded
| Capacity | Activity/topic | General approach examples | Number of hubs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-clinical | Chronic pain | Noninvasive neuromodulation techniques, Mu agonist delta antagonist opioids, mechanism of nociception induced by innocuous cold in trigeminal system, pain induction, G protein-coupled receptors and transient receptor potential ion channels, self-reported pain, pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatments, herbal remedies | 8 |
| Biomarkers/Imaging | Psychophysical and brain imaging techniques, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), magnetic resonance (PET/MR) imaging, blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) fMRI, arterial spin labeling (ASL), integrated positron emission, imaging of novel compounds | 3 | |
| Novel approaches | Brain plasticity to mediate opioid seeking behavior in conditions of pain, microassays for use in infants and newborns, transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS), and transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) in pain | 3 | |
| Genetics | Genomics, genetics of pain and opioid analgesia, gene therapy platforms | 2 | |
| Animal models | Brain–computer interface in animal models, animal models of pain in burns | 2 | |
| Clinical | Recruitment and retention/screening | Social media, community engagement, patient research partnership; rural research networks, electronic data warehouse (EDW), wearable technologies, health claims data, telehealth, retention efforts, dashboards to facilitate partnership with patients, social network analysis, electronic medical record (EMR) based screening/identification | 13 |
| Pain management | Emergency department (ED) initiated opioid and non-opioid prescribing patterns, perioperative pain management, cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), multi-disciplinary pain rehabilitation, rural telehealth, opioid prescribing patterns; alternatives to opioids (ALTO): nutritional and herbal supplements, meditation, cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) | 11 | |
| Medication-assisted treatment (MAT) | Outcomes of collaborative care models in primary care settings, suboxone clinics, methadone maintenance treatment, low dose naltrexone, buprenorphine/naloxone, specialty care | 5 | |
| Perinatal/Obstetrics | Perinatal and mother’s treatment programs, pregnant women with opioid use disorder (OUD), neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS), rural telehealth | 3 | |
| HIV | Persons living with human immunodeficiency virus (PLWHIV), outcomes among human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infected opioid-dependent patients receiving buprenorphine/naloxone | 1 | |
| Community engagement | Community networking | Community Advisory Boards (CABs) | Nearly all sites |
| Community academic partnerships | 3 | ||
| Social media/Machine learning | 3 | ||
| Traumatic brain injury (TBI) network | 1 | ||
| Health affairs blog | 1 | ||
| Local/Regional/National town hall meetings | Our community our health (national) | 1 + 22 CTSI sites | |
| Conference on opioids | 4, CDC, NIH | ||
| Science cafes | 1 | ||
| Community conversations about the opioid epidemic | 1 | ||
| Sharing of data with state, local, and government leaders | With Governor, President’s Opioid Task Force, Mayor, Department of Health (DOH), Surgeon General, Opioid Task Force, Medical Examiner, State Opioid Response, harm reduction | Nearly all sites | |
| Hot-spotting geospatial techniques to identify areas of risk | 5 | ||
| Community engagement programs | Community linkages | 2 | |
| Community engagement program with community health workers | 2 | ||
| Harm reduction community outreach program | Needle exchange | 2 | |
| Deterra deactivation pouch distribution | 2 | ||
| Narcan distribution | 2 | ||
| Needs assessments | “All of Us” | 3 | |
| Stakeholders, community members | 2 | ||
| Opioid risk tool – ED | 2 | ||
| Data science | Enterprise data warehouse | Data warehouse, i2b2 query to identify patients with opioid prescriptions | Nearly all sites |
| Health claims databases | Overdose data; analysis of electronic record data; prescribing studies of insurer databases | Nearly all sites | |
| Prescription drug monitoring program (PDMP) | Statewide effort | Nearly all sites | |
| Electronic health records data | Opioid prescription data, high-risk patients, natural language processing (NLP), epidemiology and rural service accessibility, telemedicine, registries, phenotypes | 11 | |
| Predictive modeling | Network-based models, machine learning, public–private access database | 11 | |
| Cloud-based technologies | Clinical data to address OUD | 1 | |
| Workforce development | Clinical training | Face to face, community-based learning, eHealth platform, virtual reality, collaboration with outside entities [e.g., Project Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes (ECHO)]. Training on: MAT, prescribing, quality improvement (QI) projects, for clinicians, clinical staff, residents, dentists, nurses, pharmacists, pharmacy residents, community agencies, law enforcement, and students (dental, pharmacy, and public health | 27 |
| Clinical training and research training | Workshops, seminars, grand rounds, online training, decision support tools, web-based self-management and coaching, patient-centered educational programs to reduce the development of chronic pain and OUD | 12 | |
| Research training | Fellowship/certification programs; opioid use trends; student design competition | 9 |
Specific models of care, settings, and populations
|
| ||
|---|---|---|
| Health disparities | Linkage to care models | Dual disorder |
| Prescribing safety | Communication strategies | Naloxone distribution |
| Case management | Criminal justice systems | Medication-assisted treatment (MAT) |
| Telehealth | Collaborative care models | Community health worker models |
| Statewide models | Nurse care managers | |
Fig. 1.US Mainland Funded Locations by Clinical and Translation Science Awards (CTSA), National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) T32s or Clinical Trials Network (CTN) funding in 2017–2018.