Peer Recovery Support Services (PRSS) for Individuals in Recovery Residences on MOUD (NOTE: EXPANDED SCOPE VERSION OF PROTOCOL)
Potomac Health Foundations
Summary
The United States is experiencing an unprecedented opioid epidemic. Medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD), such as methadone, buprenorphine, and extended-release naltrexone, are the recommended standard of care. There are, however, many barriers to MOUD initiation so that only a minority of individuals who could benefit from MOUD treatment ever receive it. Even among individuals presenting to a residential level of specialty SUD care, only about 20% of individuals with OUD initiate MOUD leaving them at a higher risk of opioid relapse, overdose, and death. Thus, the goal of this expansion of scope pilot study is to address this gap by modifying our currently R34-funded intervention (RFA-DA-22-034; Project # 1R34DA057627-01) that leverages the impact of peer recovery support services (PRSS) to promote MOUD initiation. Although PRSS for MOUD initiation shows promise within emergency department settings, the impact of PRSS for MOUD initiation within residential substance use disorder (SUD) settings is unknown. Residential SUD settings are an ideal opportunity to initiate medications because individuals with OUD typically have access to medically-managed withdrawal and the opportunity to learn about and initiate onto MOUD. This PRSS intervention has already been developed in the R34 parent grant to promote MOUD retention, and in this expanded scope project it will be further adapted and tested with a small pilot sample of individuals (N = 10-20) who are further upstream in the cascade of care (COC). Peers will be embedded within the inpatient program unit where the study will take place. Early into their inpatient stay and before MOUD initiation occurs, peers will introduce themselves to patients and provide motivational enhancements for MOUD initiation and inpatient treatment retention through a variety of strategies. Peer strategies will be based on the existing PRSS intervention in the parent grant and may include exploration of MOUD knowledge and attitudes, discussion of relevant lived experience, MOUD psycho-education, and a collaboratively completed wellness plan. Upon discharge, peers will use other strategies to encourage uptake and retention of MOUD such as assertive outreach and emphasize return to care after treatment dropout and/or relapse. The proposed project will explore the feasibility and acceptability of PRSS on MOUD initiation in residential SUD treatment by pilot testing the PRSS intervention with a sample of 10-20 participants receiving an 8-week course of treatment. During the intervention period, the PRSS approach will be adapted and refined with feedback from peer recovery support coaches who have helped develop and test the parent intervention for MOUD retention. Our primary outcomes are: 1) MOUD initiation (yes/no) upon discharge of the inpatient SUD program, and 2) PRSS feasibility and acceptability as measured by a participant satisfaction survey. If this pilot work is successful, the investigators would further test this MOUD initiation-focused version of the PRSS intervention via a future R01-funded Randomized Controlled Trial.
Description
The United States is experiencing an opioid epidemic marked by significant overdose deaths. Although medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD) are efficacious, the rates of MOUD initiation and retention are alarmingly low, with 11% of patients with an OUD diagnosis initiating MOUD and only 3.5% being retained on treatment for a minimum of 6 months. Also, national initiation rates onto MOUD within inpatient substance use disorder (SUD) programs are 18%, which again demonstrates low uptake of MOUD. Supplementing mediation-based treatment with Peer Recovery Support Services (PRSS) may be an effe…
Eligibility
- Age range
- 18+ years
- Sex
- All
- Healthy volunteers
- No
Inclusion Criteria: * Age 18+ (inclusive) * Meets diagnostic criteria for OUD * Currently seeking inpatient treatment at Maryland Treatment Centers program * English speaking * Willing and able to provide informed consent * Able to obtain MOUD through insurance. Exclusion Criteria: * Having been prescribed and taken a maintenance dose of sublingual buprenorphine or methadone within 14 days of entering the current inpatient treatment episode * received a dose of XR-buprenorphine or XR-naltrexone within 45 days of entering the current inpatient treatment episode.
Interventions
- BehavioralPRSS intervention for MOUD initiation
All participants of this expanded scope pilot study will be in a single-arm of an uncontrolled trial of PRSS intervention for MOUD initiation for a total of 8 weeks, starting in inpatient substance abuse treatment. This is distinguished from the R34 parent grant which targets MOUD retention and adherence rather than MOUD initiation.
Location
- Maryland Treatment CentersBaltimore, Maryland