Purpose

The goal of this study is to disentangle relationships between acute cannabis use and withdrawal on proximal depression and suicide risk and recovery in adolescents ages 12-18 years by incorporating time-varying patterns of substance use, mood, and SI. This project aims to guide the development of scalable, individualized, accessible, and affordable interventions aimed to reduce depression and suicide risk among adolescents.

Conditions

Eligibility

Eligible Ages
Between 12 Years and 18 Years
Eligible Genders
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No

Inclusion Criteria

  • Ages 12-18; - Current daily or near daily cannabis use (i.e., use ≥ 4 days per week on average; Timeline Followback); - Score ≥ 5 on PHQ-9 (telephone screener) or current depressive episode (Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview Kid 7.0.2); - Current or recent (past month) SI (passive or active), plan, or attempt (Self-Injurious Thoughts and Behaviors Interview) (Nock et al., 2007); - Access to an internet-capable smartphone (iOS or Android); - Provision of at least 1 collateral contact for risk monitoring; - Provision of informed assent (or consent if 18 years or older) and parent/guardian consent if <age 18; - Greater than 60% response rate to EMA prompts during the first EMA phase; - No immediate plan to discontinue cannabis use in the next 3 months; - Positive toxicology result for cannabis on baseline urinalysis.

Exclusion Criteria

  • Any factor that impairs ability to comprehend and effectively participate, including acute intoxication at time of consent; - Cannabis use >4 times/day on average (to maximize likelihood of capturing mood and SI during non-use times); - Inability to speak/write English fluently; - Gross cognitive impairment, for example due to florid psychosis, intellectual disability, developmental delay, or neurodegenerative disease; - Current epilepsy diagnosis; - Individuals who are under the legal protection of the government or state (wards of the state); - Response of "No" to the knowledge check question regarding EMA suicidality response time; - Inability to wear Fitbit device.

Study Design

Phase
N/A
Study Type
Interventional
Allocation
Randomized
Intervention Model
Parallel Assignment
Intervention Model Description
Following a shared two-week baseline assessment period (Arm 1) for all enrolled participants, participants will be split into 2 arms, randomly assigned to one of two interventions (Arms 2 or 3, CB-Abst or CB-Mon).
Primary Purpose
Basic Science
Masking
Single (Outcomes Assessor)

Arm Groups

ArmDescriptionAssigned Intervention
Experimental
Cannabis Abstinence (CB-Abst)
Those randomized to the abstinence condition will be asked to stop using cannabis for eight weeks. They will participate in a contingency management protocol, which uses an escalating remuneration schedule to incentivize abstinence. Abstinence is confirmed biochemically via progressively decreasing values of creatinine-adjusted THCCOOH.
  • Behavioral: Contingency management for cannabis abstinence
    Those randomized to the abstinence condition (CB-Abst) will be incentivized using an escalating reinforcement schedule for eight weeks of cannabis abstinence.
No Intervention
Cannabis Monitoring (CB-Mon)
Those randomized to the monitoring condition will be asked to make no changes to their cannabis use frequency or dose for the duration of the eight week study.
No Intervention
Pre-intervention Pooled Groups (EMA Phase 1 Only)
All enrolled participants will participate in approximately two weeks of EMA data collection prior to being randomized and starting intervention procedures to characterize mood during baseline use as usual (CB-Abst or CB-Mon).

Recruiting Locations

More Details

Status
Recruiting
Sponsor
Massachusetts General Hospital

Study Contact

Randi M Schuster, PhD
617-643-6673
rschuster@mgh.harvard.edu

Detailed Description

We will recruit 200 community-based adolescents, ages 12-18 years, with daily or near daily cannabis use, current depression, and past month SI. Participants will be enrolled in a 10-week, 3-phased, mixed-methods protocol. All participants will complete a 2 week baseline phase (Phase 1) involving real-time, ambulatory smartphone monitoring (ecological momentary assessment; EMA) during which they will use cannabis per usual to quantify the temporal relationship between use and mood and SI, and the within- (e.g., concurrent other substance use, social context of use) and between-subject factors (e.g., severity of cannabis use, depression and SI) that moderate these linkages. We will work with participants schedule to ensure that the start of this 2-week baseline phase coincides with when they do not anticipate any major deviations from their typical pattern of cannabis use (e.g., family vacation, exam week). After the baseline phase, participants will be scheduled for the randomization component of the study, which will employ a 2-arm, within-subject, parallel group design to examine the effects of short- and longer-term cannabis withdrawal across 8 weeks of cannabis abstinence on depression and SI. Participants will be randomized to 8 weeks of abstinence with contingency management (CB-Abst; n=100) or non-contingent monitoring with no abstinence requirement (CBMon; n=100). Randomization will occur in a 1:1 ratio in blocks of 6 based on a computerized scheme developed by the study statistician. Randomization will be stratified by age, sex, and depression severity. A key aspect of the approach is that the 8-week period is long enough to observe true changes due to cannabis discontinuation, separate from effects of cannabis withdrawal, and residual cannabinoid exposure. Both groups will complete 1-week of EMA in weeks 1 (Phase 2) and 8 (Phase 3) of the randomized study period. In addition to the 3 waves of smartphone, EMA data collection, participants will complete 12 study visits across ~10 weeks. Visits will entail collection of urine samples for verification of self-reported use and abstinence verification (for CB-Abst during the randomization phase), as well as brief questionnaires and interviews on interim substance use, craving, withdrawal, mood symptoms, and SI.

Notice

Study information shown on this site is derived from ClinicalTrials.gov (a public registry operated by the National Institutes of Health). The listing of studies provided is not certain to be all studies for which you might be eligible. Furthermore, study eligibility requirements can be difficult to understand and may change over time, so it is wise to speak with your medical care provider and individual research study teams when making decisions related to participation.