N/A
N=104
Approach Bias Modification for the Treatment of Cannabis Use Disorder
Cannabis Use Disorder
Bottom Line
View on ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT03629990 ↗Enrolled (actual)
104
Serious AEs
0.0%
Results posted
Dec 2024
Primary outcome: Primary: Cannabis Approach Bias — -8.43; 4.05; 5.43; -1.36 seconds
Study Design & Population
- Study type
- Interventional
- Phase
- N/A
- Interventions
- Approach Bias Modification (ABM) (Behavioral); Sham ABM (Behavioral); Psychosocial therapy for cannabis use disorder. (Behavioral)
- Age
- Adult, Older Adult · 18+ yrs
- Sex
- All
- Sponsor
- Medical University of South Carolina
- Primary completion
- Oct 2023
Outcome Measures
| Outcome | Result | p-value |
|---|---|---|
| PRIMARY Cannabis Approach Bias |
-8.43; 4.05; 5.43; -1.36; 1.8; -0.22 | — |
| SECONDARY Percent Days Using Cannabis |
86.6; 87.7; 74.1; 72.0; 69.1; 71.7 | — |
| SECONDARY Marijuana Craving Questionnaire Total Score (Craving) |
39.5; 38.6; 43.1; 40.3; 31; 31.1 | — |
Summary
Effective and durable treatments for cannabis use disorder remain elusive. Given the increasing prevalence rates of cannabis use and CUD nationwide, investigation of novel treatments is warranted. Implicit cognitive processing is an emerging, and potentially critical therapeutic target.
Cognitive models of addiction posit an override of explicit control-related cognitive processes by implicit reward-driven processes resulting from chronic drug exposure. One form of implicit cognitive processing is approach bias, or, the automatic tendency to approach rather than avoid drug cues, which has been identified for alcohol, nicotine, opioids, and cannabis. Cannabis approach bias predicts increased cannabis use, dependence severity, and cannabis-related problems among heavy cannabis users. Approach bias modification (ABM) is a novel treatment approach that seeks to reduce approach bias by attenuating the incentive-salience of drug cues, and subsequently, drug cue reactivity and drug use. ABM has been shown to reduce relapse rates in alcohol dependent adults by 10-13% at one-year follow-up, and dependence severity in nicotine dependent adults. Our pilot data suggests that ABM may also reduce cannabis craving and that gender may moderate the effect of ABM on cannabis sessions per day in non-treatment seeking adults with CUD. A recent fMRI study with alcohol-dependent adults found decreased mesolimbic activation in participants who received ABM compared to sham-control participants. ABM appears to target implicit reward-driven processes, and could be an effective adjunct to traditional psychosocial and/or future pharmacological interventions that target explicit control-related processes.
Building on our promising feasibility data, the proposed K23 research study will examine the effects of ABM on cue-reactivity and cannabis outcomes in a four-session randomized, double-blind, sham-controlled pilot treatment trial. One-hundred and six (106) treatment-seeking adults with moderate to severe CUD will be randomized to receive either MET/CBT plus ABM or Motivational Enhancement Therapy/Cognitive Behavioral Therapy(MET/CBT) plus sham-ABM. An equal number of men and women will be recruited and randomization will be stratified by gender. ABM sessions will occur following each of the three weekly MET/CBT therapy sessions. Primary outcomes will include cannabis cue-reactivity and cannabis use.
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
- Be age 18-65 and must be able to provide informed consent.
- Meet DSM-5 criteria for current moderate to severe CUD (past 60 days).
- Identify cannabis as their primary substance of choice.
- Consent to remain abstinent from alcohol and cannabis for 12 hours immediately prior to study visits and other drugs of abuse (except nicotine) for three days prior (see Additional Instrumentation below for methods); by restricting cannabis and other substance use as proposed, participants should not be under the acute effects of cannabis or other substances.
Exclusion Criteria
- Evidence of, or a history of serious medical or neurological disease that may affect cognitive processing.
- History of, or current psychotic disorder, bipolar disorder, and attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, or current untreated major depressive disorder as these may interfere with subjective measurements.
- Current use of psychotropic medications because these may affect subjective measurements (individuals taking antidepressants will be allowed).
- Current suicidal ideation. Individuals who endorse suicidal ideation will be seen by a psychologist or psychiatrist in the office and will be referred to treatment as necessary.
- Women who are pregnant, nursing or of childbearing potential and not practicing an effective means of birth control.
- Moderate to severe DSM-5 substance use disorder within the past 60 days (other than nicotine or cannabis).
Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03629990). Outcome figures and adverse-event rates are extracted automatically from the registry's posted results and are provided for clinician reference, not as a substitute for the primary publication.