| Literature DB >> 36003213 |
Sarah K Brewer1, Jonathan M Davis1,2, Rachana Singh2, Lisa C Welch1.
Abstract
Translation of research discoveries into health impact can take many years, creating delays in improving clinical outcomes. One approach to promoting timely translation is to examine successful cases in order to understand facilitators and strategies for overcoming barriers. We examined the development of evidence-based management for neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) at one academic medical center, with a primary focus on pharmacologic treatment. Despite a substantial increase in NAS case incidence starting in the early 2000s, significant sociocultural, policy, and regulatory barriers limited collaborative NAS research. Facilitators for translation encompassed: 1) pursuing research of societal interest, 2) building an effective interdisciplinary team, 3) intentionally linking clinical, research, and advocacy efforts, 4) broad stakeholder engagement across clinical, policy, and research arenas, and 5) leveraging local resources. Challenges included lack of commercially available U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved neonatal drug formulations, legal and regulatory barriers related to off-label and illicit use of opioids, recruitment for a treatment associated with drug withdrawal syndromes, misalignment of research design needs with real-world scenarios, and episodic funding. Benefits of successful translation included improvements in clinical care, reduced healthcare costs related to NAS, and enhanced legislative, policy, and research strategies to support broader neonatal investigations.Entities:
Keywords: CTSA; Retrospective case study; neonatal abstinence syndrome; pediatric pharmacology; successful translation
Year: 2022 PMID: 36003213 PMCID: PMC9393572 DOI: 10.1017/cts.2022.431
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Transl Sci ISSN: 2059-8661
Fig. 1.Intersecting historical trajectories for evidence-based (pharmacological) treatment for neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS).
Fig. 2.Key milestones toward an evidence-based (pharmacologic) treatment for neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS).
Impact of research on NAS at one academic medical center
| Category | Indicator | Description | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
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| Clinical and medical | Guidelines | Published guidelines recommending longer-acting opioids (e.g., methadone) as first-line agent, rather than most often used prior to treatment [ | Demonstrated |
| Therapeutic procedures | Findings influenced a shift from using morphine to using longer-acting opioids (e.g., methadone) [ | Demonstrated | |
| Drugs | Ongoing testing of commercially available neonate-safer formulation of longer-acting opioid (buprenorphine) | Potential (ongoing clinical trial expected to be completed in 2025) | |
| Community & Public Health | Health Care Quality | Treatment with longer-acting opioids (e.g., methadone) reduced length of pharmaceutical treatment [ | Demonstrated |
| Economic | Cost Savings | Treatment with longer-acting opioids (e.g., methadone) reduced length of stay, which could reduce costs of NAS treatment [ | Potential |
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| Clinical and medical | Therapeutic procedures | Contributed to dissemination and implementation of the Eat, Sleep, Console (ESC) tool statewide and internationally [ | Demonstrated |
| Community & Public Health | Health Care Quality | Use of the ESC tool reduced the need for pharmacological treatment of neonates with NAS [ | Demonstrated |
| Economic | Cost Savings | Use of the ESC tool shortened length of stay, which could reduce costs of NAS treatment [ | Potential |
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| Policy and legislative | Expert testimony and legislation | Legislation requiring research on prenatal opioid use and NAS [ | Demonstrated |
| Legislation requiring neonatal expertise at the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) deliberations [ | Demonstrated | ||
| Legislation to incentivize development of neonatal pharmaceuticals [ | Demonstrated | ||
| Committee participation and policies | Broad stakeholder engagement of FDA’s Neonatal Advisory Committee to share knowledge and reduce inefficiencies | Demonstrated | |
| Broad international stakeholder engagement through Critical Path Institute’s International Neonatal Consortium to reduce inefficiencies | Demonstrated | ||
| Clinical and medical | Investigative procedures | Published guidelines for conducting clinical trials with neonates to provide a common roadmap for investigators and regulators to follow [ | Demonstrated |
| Developing first international database of real-world neonatal data to facilitate evidence base for neonatal care | Potential (anticipated to be in use by 2025) | ||
Categories and indicators follow the Translational Science Benefits Model (TSBM) developed by the Institute of Clinical & Translational Sciences at Washington University School of Medicine. “Demonstrated benefits are those that have been observed and are verifiable. Potential benefits are those that are logically expected with moderate to high confidence” [19].
Source: JMD, personal communication.
Barriers encountered and team strategies used
| Barrier | Strategy |
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| Lack of commercially available, neonate-safer drug formulation of longer-acting opioid (methadone or buprenorphine), which research had found to be superior to most common drug treatment (morphine) |
Advocated for legislation and policy change to incentivize and facilitate pediatric drug development [ Engaged pharmaceutical company to develop a neonate-safer formulation of longer-acting opioid (buprenorphine) Facilitated collaborations between funder and pharmaceutical company to support feasibility of clinical trial for the new formulation. |
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Food and Drug Administration (FDA) requirement for new drug formulation for research despite ongoing use in clinical care |
Developed an alcohol-free liquid formulation using methadone powder for research purposes The alcohol-free product needed to be tested extensively by an independent laboratory approved by FDA prior to use in neonates |
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Transportation and storage restrictions for regulated study drug | Obtained Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) approval to move methadone to trial sites |
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Mandated reporting requirements regarding illicit / recreational drug use of research participants, which undermined trust | Advocated for increased confidentiality protection for pregnant persons participating in research regarding opioid use disorder (OUD) and NAS by publishing an article with an FDA representative[ |
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Stigma and mothers’ concerns about potential negative side effects of study drug for neonate |
Engaged obstetricians providing antenatal care to the mothers (a trusted source) to introduce the study and obtain informed consent. Added additional sites and expanded the inclusion criteria (e.g., including mothers who used illicit drugs during pregnancy) in order to enroll more subjects. |
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Controlled study design with narrow inclusion criteria (requiring mothers to be in an OUD treatment program or receiving an opioid for chronic pain treatment, but not using illicit drugs) | |
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| Episodic funding limited the ability to retain research staff between funding awards | Although individual research teams have limited ability to overcome this barrier, the team utilized no-cost study design and statistical guidance services supported by the local Clinical and Translational Science Award (CTSA) as a partial solution to continuity of research staff and projects |