A patient-centered nurse-supported primary care-based collaborative care program to treat opioid use disorder and depression: Design and protocol for the MI-CARE randomized controlled trial

Opioid use disorder (OUD) contributes to rising morbidity and mortality. Life-saving OUD treatments can be provided in primary care but most patients with OUD don't receive treatment. Comorbid depression and other conditions complicate OUD management, especially in primary care. The MI-CARE tri...

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Veröffentlicht in:Contemporary clinical trials 2023-04, Vol.127, p.107124-107124, Article 107124
Hauptverfasser: DeBar, Lynn L., Bushey, Michael A., Kroenke, Kurt, Bobb, Jennifer F., Schoenbaum, Michael, Thompson, Ella E., Justice, Morgan, Zatzick, Douglas, Hamilton, Leah K., McMullen, Carmit K., Hallgren, Kevin A., Benes, Lindsay L., Forman, David P., Caldeiro, Ryan M., Brown, Ryan P., Campbell, Noll L., Anderson, Melissa L., Son, Sungtaek, Haggstrom, David A., Whiteside, Lauren, Schleyer, Titus K.L., Bradley, Katharine A.
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container_end_page 107124
container_issue
container_start_page 107124
container_title Contemporary clinical trials
container_volume 127
creator DeBar, Lynn L.
Bushey, Michael A.
Kroenke, Kurt
Bobb, Jennifer F.
Schoenbaum, Michael
Thompson, Ella E.
Justice, Morgan
Zatzick, Douglas
Hamilton, Leah K.
McMullen, Carmit K.
Hallgren, Kevin A.
Benes, Lindsay L.
Forman, David P.
Caldeiro, Ryan M.
Brown, Ryan P.
Campbell, Noll L.
Anderson, Melissa L.
Son, Sungtaek
Haggstrom, David A.
Whiteside, Lauren
Schleyer, Titus K.L.
Bradley, Katharine A.
description Opioid use disorder (OUD) contributes to rising morbidity and mortality. Life-saving OUD treatments can be provided in primary care but most patients with OUD don't receive treatment. Comorbid depression and other conditions complicate OUD management, especially in primary care. The MI-CARE trial is a pragmatic randomized encouragement (Zelen) trial testing whether offering collaborative care (CC) to patients with OUD and clinically-significant depressive symptoms increases OUD medication treatment with buprenorphine and improves depression outcomes compared to usual care. Adult primary care patients with OUD and depressive symptoms (n ≥ 800) from two statewide health systems: Kaiser Permanente Washington and Indiana University Health are identified with computer algorithms from electronic Health record (EHR) data and automatically enrolled. A random sub-sample (50%) of eligible patients is offered the MI-CARE intervention: a 12-month nurse-driven CC intervention that includes motivational interviewing and behavioral activation. The remaining 50% of the study cohort comprise the usual care comparison group and is never contacted. The primary outcome is days of buprenorphine treatment provided during the intervention period. The powered secondary outcome is change in Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ)-9 depression scores. Both outcomes are obtained from secondary electronic healthcare sources and compared in “intent-to-treat” analyses. MI-CARE addresses the need for rigorous encouragement trials to evaluate benefits of offering CC to generalizable samples of patients with OUD and mental health conditions identified from EHRs, as they would be in practice, and comparing outcomes to usual primary care. We describe the design and implementation of the trial, currently underway. Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT05122676. Clinical trial registration date: November 17, 2021.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.cct.2023.107124
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Life-saving OUD treatments can be provided in primary care but most patients with OUD don't receive treatment. Comorbid depression and other conditions complicate OUD management, especially in primary care. The MI-CARE trial is a pragmatic randomized encouragement (Zelen) trial testing whether offering collaborative care (CC) to patients with OUD and clinically-significant depressive symptoms increases OUD medication treatment with buprenorphine and improves depression outcomes compared to usual care. Adult primary care patients with OUD and depressive symptoms (n ≥ 800) from two statewide health systems: Kaiser Permanente Washington and Indiana University Health are identified with computer algorithms from electronic Health record (EHR) data and automatically enrolled. A random sub-sample (50%) of eligible patients is offered the MI-CARE intervention: a 12-month nurse-driven CC intervention that includes motivational interviewing and behavioral activation. 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subjects Adult
Behavioral activation
Buprenorphine - therapeutic use
Collaborative care
Depression
Depression - diagnosis
Depression - drug therapy
Humans
Motivational Interviewing
Opioid use disorder
Opioid-Related Disorders - drug therapy
Patient-Centered Care
Primary care
Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
title A patient-centered nurse-supported primary care-based collaborative care program to treat opioid use disorder and depression: Design and protocol for the MI-CARE randomized controlled trial
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