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Roger D Weiss

Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States.

2 papers in the library · 23 citations · publishing 2023-2025

Papers

Clinical Trial Design Challenges and Opportunities for Emerging Treatments for Opioid Use Disorder: A Review.

JAMA psychiatry January 1, 2023 Brian D Kiluk, Bethea A Kleykamp, Sandra D Comer et al. 22 citations

A review sponsored by a public-private partnership addresses clinical trial design for new opioid use disorder (OUD) treatments that target systems other than the μ-opioid receptor. The authors present consensus recommendations for evaluating novel therapies such as cannabinoids, psychedelics, sedative-hypnotics, and immunotherapeutics. Key design elements include specifying the treatment stage (e.g., early abstinence, long-term recovery), defining the treatment's role (adjunctive or independent), selecting patient-informed primary outcomes that assess opioid use patterns, retention, and quality of life, and monitoring adverse events like relapse or overdose, especially when patients are not on maintenance opioid agonist or antagonist medications. Incorporating input from people with lived experience is urged to accelerate development and uptake of effective therapeutics.

Modulating mechanisms of adverse childhood experiences in a mindfulness-based intervention: preliminary insights from an opioid use disorder study.

Frontiers in psychology January 1, 2025 Diane Joss, Joseph Rosansky, Paula Gardiner et al. 1 citation

Among people with opioid use disorder receiving buprenorphine, those who also took part in a 24-week online mindfulness-based intervention showed a specific chain of symptom improvement linked to their history of adverse childhood experiences (ACE). Higher ACE severity was associated with greater reductions in self-critical rumination by week 8, which then predicted reduced pain catastrophizing by week 16, and less pain interference by week 24. This pathway was not seen in a matched recovery support control group. Both groups experienced significant reductions in depression, anxiety, and other symptoms, but only in the mindfulness group did ACE severity predict changes in self-critical rumination, suggesting this may be a key target for treatment.