Treating OUD/PTSD in Residential Care: Written Exposure in Substance Treatment (WEST).
Project Number1R61DA062302-01
Contact PI/Project LeaderSCHACHT, REBECCA L Other PIs
Awardee OrganizationUNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND BALTIMORE COUNTY
Description
Abstract Text
Project Summary
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and opioid use disorder (OUD) co-occur at very high rates
(33-66%). Untreated PTSD among people with OUD is associated with elevated risk of
overdose, suicidality, and other serious outcomes. Exposure and other evidence-based
treatments for PTSD are effective for patients with substance use disorders (SUD), including
OUD, but rarely implemented in residential SUD treatment, representing a crucial missed
opportunity to address PTSD symptoms. Written Exposure Therapy (WET) is a brief, evidence-
based intervention for PTSD that shows promise in residential OUD/SUD treatment settings, but
our pilot work has indicated a need for additional refinements to adapt WET for this setting. The
proposed multisite study will build on the investigative team’s prior research projects that have
explored WET for PTSD in the context of residential SUD treatment. We will use the 8-step
ADAPT-ITT structure to create and test Written Exposure in Substance Treatment (WEST), an
adapted version of WET for use with people with OUD in residential SUD treatment. We will
obtain candid feedback from key stakeholders on the PTSD-related treatment needs of people
in residential OUD/SUD care and the components, implementation, and candidate modifications
of WET for residential OUD/SUD treatment, develop an initial adaptation of WET, obtain expert
feedback from the developer of WET on the adapted version, and conduct an uncontrolled pilot
test of the adapted version with N=20 participants. After this preliminary phase, we will examine
the efficacy of the refined WET protocol in the context of residential OUD/SUD treatment by
enrolling N=224 participants in a randomized controlled trial across two sites. In addition to the
primary outcome of PTSD symptom reduction, we will test secondary and exploratory outcomes
related to OUD/SUD outcomes, moderators and mediators of symptom reduction, and catalog
facilitators and barriers of WET implementation in a residential OUD/SUD treatment setting. By
expanding investigations of WET into residential OUD/SUD treatment settings, this project will
significantly contribute to our knowledge base of practical strategies to provide comprehensive
and integrated behavioral healthcare and reduce the impact of the current opioid epidemic.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Project Narrative
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and opioid use disorder (OUD) often co-occur, but
treatment for PTSD is rarely available in residential substance use disorder (SUD) treatment
settings. Written Exposure Therapy (WET) is a brief, evidence-based intervention for PTSD that
shows promise for treating people with OUD in residential SUD care. With stakeholder
collaboration, we will create and test a theory-driven adaptation of WET to address PTSD-OUD
in residential SUD care, thereby advancing knowledge of practical strategies that are crucial for
addressing the opioid use crisis.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
AcuteAddressBehaviorCaringCatalogsClientCognitiveCollaborationsDataDropoutEffectivenessElementsEnrollmentEventEvidence based interventionEvidence based treatmentFeedbackHealthcareHourIndividualInterventionInvestigationKnowledgeLifeManualsMediatorMental HealthModelingModificationOpioidOutcomeParticipantPatientsPersonsPhasePilot ProjectsPost-Traumatic Stress DisordersProtocols documentationPublic HealthQualifyingRandomizedRandomized, Controlled TrialsResearchResearch Project GrantsResidential TreatmentSiteSpecific qualifier valueStressful EventStructureSubstance Use DisorderSymptomsTestingTimeTrainingWorkWritingaccess restrictionsbehavioral healthcomorbiditydesignefficacy evaluationevidence baseexperiencefollow-upimprovedknowledge baseopioid epidemicopioid overdoseopioid useopioid use disorderoverdose deathoverdose riskpilot testpost interventionpreferenceprimary outcomereduce symptomsrelative effectivenesssexual assaultsuicidaltheoriestraumatic event
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