spacer

  National Drug Abuse Treatment 

line
black line
White Sep

Use your browser's back button to choose another title or click here for a New Search.

Abstinence Incentives for Methadone-Maintained Stimulant Users: Outcomes for Those Testing Stimulant-Positive versus Negative at Study Intake.

Presented at the College on Problems of Drug Dependence (CPDD) annual meeting, Quebec City, Canada, June 16-21, 2007.

Maxine L. Stitzer, PhD (Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, MA Node),

View presentation

Baseline drug use can predict treatment outcome, and methadone maintenance patients with relatively lower levels of on-going drug abuse have generally been over-represented among patients who respond well to abstinence incentive interventions. This study examined data from the National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network MIEDAR protocol (CTN-0007: Motivational Incentives for Enhanced Drug Abuse Recovery: Methadone Clinics) to assess the association between intake urine test result and treatment outcome and to determine whether abstinence incentives were differentially effective in methadone maintained stimulant users testing stimulant negative versus positive at study entry.

Data were from 386 stabilized methadone maintained patients who participated in the CTN multi-site study involving random assignment to usual care with vs. without abstinence incentives; 24% tested stimulant negative at study entry and 76% tested positive. Intake urine test result was strongly associated with overall percent of during-treatment stimulant negative urines submitted (82% versus 34% negative samples). However, abstinence incentives had a significant effect on percent of negative samples submitted during the study both for those testing negative at study entry and for those testing stimulant positive at study entry. These findings suggest that abstinence incentives can be beneficial regardless of baseline drug use severity and can therefore be offered to all methadone maintenance patients with on-going stimulant drug use, with reasonable expectation that they will improve overall treatment outcomes for this difficult to treat group of patients. (Presentation, PowerPoint slides, English, 2007)

Keywords: Behavior therapy | Contingency management (CM) | CTN outcomes | Methadone maintenance | MIEDAR | Motivational incentives | Stimulant abuse | College on Problems of Drug Dependence (CPDD) annual meeting, 2007

Document No: 203

Submitted by Maxine Stitzer, PhD, Principal Investigator, 7/2/2007

AUTHORS SEARCH LINK
Stitzer, Maxine L. search mail
PROTOCOLS
NIDA-CTN-0007 search www
NODES & CTPs
Mid-Atlantic (Lead) search www
  Glenwood Life Counseling Center search
  OASIS Clinic search
Delaware Valley search www
New England search
New York search www
  Greenwich House, Inc. search www
  Lower Eastside Service Center (LESC) search www
Pacific Region search www
  Aegis Medical Systems search www
Southwest search www

Supported by a grant from the National Institute on Drug Abuse to the University of Washington Alcohol and Drug Abuse Institute.
The materials on this site have neither been created nor reviewed by NIDA.
Updated 7/2007 -- http://ctndisseminationlibrary.org/display/203.htm
info@ctndisseminationlibrary.org