6 Clinical Trials for Various Conditions
To understand the acute subjective, physiological, and cognitive effects of commercial kratom extract products among US adults who consume these products regularly, and to understand how these products are metabolized by the human body.
The goal of this observational clinical study is to is to learn more about how commercial kratom products affect healthy adults who consume them regularly. The main questions it aims to answer are: 1. What are the acute physiological, subjective, and cognitive effects of kratom following participant self-administration of a single oral dose of the participants usual kratom product at the participants typical dose? 2. What are the physiological, subjective, and cognitive effects associated with kratom product discontinuation among adults who use regularly? 3. What are the pharmacokinetics of kratom products consumed by adults who use regularly? On the first study day: Under direct observation, participants will self-administer a single oral dose of the participants own commercial kratom product that that is regularly taken and will consume it at the participants self-selected typical dose/serving. Following this, serial blood draws and urine collection will occur along with administration of validated questionnaires, tests, and continual monitoring. After this first study day, participants will no longer be permitted to use any of the participants kratom product during the study. On study nights/days 2-3: participants will reside a clinical research unit and be observed and evaluated for kratom withdrawal syndrome.
Kratom (Mitragyna speciosa) is a plant often used to self-treat conditions such as pain, coughing, diarrhea, anxiety and depression, opioid use disorder, and opioid withdrawal. Due to limited data availability, the goal of this clinical trial is to learn about safety, pharmacokinetics (what the body does to the drug) and pharmacodynamics (what the drug does to the body) of Kratom in adult recreational polydrug users with opioid experience.
The goal of this study is to investigate whether the botanical product kratom affects how the body processes the opioid drug oxycodone. The main research questions to be answered are two-fold: 1. How does kratom affect the manner in which oxycodone is metabolized (broken down and removed) by the body? 2. Does kratom change the effects oxycodone exerts on the body? Healthy adult participants will complete four study arms, during which they will be given the following: * Kratom (as a tea) * A single dose of oxycodone (as a tablet) * Kratom tea and a single dose of oxycodone * Kratom tea for four days, then kratom tea and a single dose of oxycodone
Kratom is a botanical natural product that has opioid-like effects. Kratom is commonly used to self-treat withdrawal symptoms associated with opioid addiction, as well as pain. Kratom products include pills, extracts, and powders, most of which contain two primary psychoactive constituents: mitragynine and 7-hydroxymitragynine. Preliminary data from the investigator's laboratory has shown that these two constituents and extracts made from commercially available kratom products are strong inhibitors of the drug metabolizing enzymes cytochrome P450 (CYP) 2D6 and CYP3A4. These enzymes are responsible for metabolizing more than 50% of marketed drugs, including several opioids, benzodiazepines, and antidepressants. Thus, co-consumption of kratom products with drugs metabolized by CYP2D6 and CYP3A4 could increase the risk of serious adverse effects. The effects of a well-characterized kratom product on CYP2D6 and CYP3A4 activity will be assessed in healthy volunteers using a 'cocktail' approach consisting of the validated probe drugs dextromethorphan and midazolam. Results will (1) provide useful information regarding risks associated with co-consuming kratom with opioids and other CYP2D6 and CYP3A4 drug substrates and (2) inform the design of future kratom-drug interactions studies.
Background: Mitragyna speciosa, also called kratom, is a plant used in Southeast Asia for its psychoactive effects. Its use has increased in the US, and an estimated 10 million adults may take it at least semiregularly. Most scientific research on human use of kratom has consisted of surveys in which people looked back on their experiences with it. Results from those surveys have been useful, but, like many behaviors, kratom use can be more fully understood if it is also studied as it happens. The technical term for this procedure is ecological momentary assessment (EMA). In EMA, people report their moods and activities in real time, a few times per day, usually with a smartphone app. Objective: This natural history study will collect data about how people use kratom and how it affects them. Eligibility: People aged 18 and older who use kratom 3 or more times per week Design: Most participants will be remote only. They will fill out an online consent form. They will also answer an initial set of questions about their kratom use. They will download an app on their smartphones for EMA (described above). They will use this app to answer short sets of questions for 15 days in a row about their ongoing behaviors and moods, including kratom use. They will use a prepaid envelope to mail in a sample of their kratom product. Some participants, after doing the EMA part of the study, can also come to a clinic. They will have 1 visit for informed consent (1-3 hours) and 1 visit for a monitoring session (8 hours) where we can directly assess the effects of their usual dose of kratom. They will bring their kratom produce with them to take on site. Before they take the kratom, they will have a physical exam. They will have blood and urine tests. They will answer questions about their sleep, driving, and general feelings. They will complete tasks on a computer to measure their reflexes and response times. Their driving performance will be assessed in a simulator. Researchers will watch participants consume their kratom. A sample of their product will be taken for analysis. After taking their kratom, those participants will repeat some questionnaires and tests, including the driving simulation. They will also be interviewed about their use of kratom....