Since 2000, the Southern Consortium Node (SCN) has worked closely with community partners and colleagues nationwide in research and dissemination activities designed to improve the treatment of addictions through research and implementation of evidence-based practice. In this renewal application, the SCN proposes to expand to include a broader region of the southeast through partnership with Duke University, a national leader in medical research. Duke University is an ideal partner because of their complementary scientific expertise, strong primary care and HIV research activities, geographic proximity and prior experience with CTN activities. The partnership will extend the SCN's regional and geographic distribution to span a large portion of the Southeastern US and bring close connections with well-established primary care and HIV clinical research networks to broaden the types of clinical settings and patient populations available for CTN trials. The SCN will establish a robust collaboration with the CTSA initiative through a number of individuals who will serve as investigators on both the CTN and CTSA, including Dr. Brady who is the PI of the MUSC CTSA. The primary specific aims for the next five years are: to extend the geographic reach of the SCN to include CTPs and academic partners in South Carolina, North Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee and Mississippi. To develop research sites in primary care and medical specialty clinics that will expand the diversity of and number of participants available to participate in CTN trials. To increase the use of CTN as a training platform and a research platform for non-CTN research. To develop a robust collaboration between the CTN and both local and national CTSAs for the purpose of bidirectional sharing of """"""""best-practices"""""""", informatics and trial design strategies across networks. To expand the scientific expertise available to the CTN through partnership of investigators at MUSC and Duke University.

Public Health Relevance

The CTN is a cooperative agreement between NIDA, treatment providers and researchers throughout the nation in which science is being utilized as a vehicle to improve the treatment of addictions. It is the goal of the SCN to work collaboratively with NIDA, the newly established coordinating a data centers, and other CTN Nodes in conducting and directing multi-site clinical trials and dissemination efforts.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
Type
Cooperative Clinical Research--Cooperative Agreements (U10)
Project #
3U10DA013727-11S3
Application #
8272809
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZDA1-KXH-C (04))
Program Officer
Dobbins, Ronald
Project Start
2000-09-30
Project End
2015-08-31
Budget Start
2010-09-01
Budget End
2011-08-31
Support Year
11
Fiscal Year
2011
Total Cost
$348,047
Indirect Cost
Name
Medical University of South Carolina
Department
Psychiatry
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
183710748
City
Charleston
State
SC
Country
United States
Zip Code
29425
John, William S; Zhu, He; Mannelli, Paolo et al. (2018) Prevalence, patterns, and correlates of multiple substance use disorders among adult primary care patients. Drug Alcohol Depend 187:79-87
McClure, Erin A; Baker, Nathaniel L; Sonne, Susan C et al. (2018) Tobacco use during cannabis cessation: Use patterns and impact on abstinence in a National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network study. Drug Alcohol Depend 192:59-66
Garrett, Sharon B; Doyle, Suzanne R; Peavy, K Michelle et al. (2018) Age differences in outcomes among patients in the ""Stimulant Abuser Groups to Engage in 12-Step"" (STAGE-12) intervention. J Subst Abuse Treat 84:21-29
Winhusen, Theresa; Feaster, Daniel J; Duan, Rui et al. (2018) Baseline Cigarette Smoking Status as a Predictor of Virologic Suppression and CD4 Cell Count During One-Year Follow-Up in Substance Users with Uncontrolled HIV Infection. AIDS Behav 22:2026-2032
Trivedi, Madhukar H; Greer, Tracy L; Rethorst, Chad D et al. (2017) Randomized Controlled Trial Comparing Exercise to Health Education for Stimulant Use Disorder: Results From the CTN-0037 STimulant Reduction Intervention Using Dosed Exercise (STRIDE) Study. J Clin Psychiatry 78:1075-1082
McClure, Erin A; King, Jacqueline S; Wahle, Aimee et al. (2017) Comparing adult cannabis treatment-seekers enrolled in a clinical trial with national samples of cannabis users in the United States. Drug Alcohol Depend 176:14-20
Pan, Yue; Liu, Hongmei; Metsch, Lisa R et al. (2017) Factors Associated with HIV Testing Among Participants from Substance Use Disorder Treatment Programs in the US: A Machine Learning Approach. AIDS Behav 21:534-546
Worley, Matthew J; Heinzerling, Keith G; Shoptaw, Steven et al. (2017) Volatility and change in chronic pain severity predict outcomes of treatment for prescription opioid addiction. Addiction 112:1202-1209
Babalonis, Shanna; Haney, Margaret; Malcolm, Robert J et al. (2017) Oral cannabidiol does not produce a signal for abuse liability in frequent marijuana smokers. Drug Alcohol Depend 172:9-13
Sherman, Brian J; McRae-Clark, Aimee L; Baker, Nathaniel L et al. (2017) Gender differences among treatment-seeking adults with cannabis use disorder: Clinical profiles of women and men enrolled in the achieving cannabis cessation-evaluating N-acetylcysteine treatment (ACCENT) study. Am J Addict 26:136-144

Showing the most recent 10 out of 142 publications