Description Module

Description Module

The Description Module contains narrative descriptions of the clinical trial, including a brief summary and detailed description. These descriptions provide important information about the study's purpose, methodology, and key details in language accessible to both researchers and the general public.

Description Module path is as follows:

Study -> Protocol Section -> Description Module

Description Module


Ignite Creation Date: 2025-12-25 @ 12:04 AM
Ignite Modification Date: 2025-12-25 @ 12:04 AM
NCT ID: NCT07178158
Brief Summary: Addiction is a brain disorder characterized by a broad range of both apparent and subtle cognitive impairments in attention, memory, executive functions, and decision-making. These cognitive problems are clinically significant and may contribute to poor treatment outcomes in people with Substance Use Disorders (SUDs), such as a high risk of dropout, low treatment compliance, and shorter periods of abstinence. Studies on cognitive function in SUDs reveal that chronic use of drugs and alcohol can also negatively affect another crucial component of cognition: awareness, or metacognition. Metacognition is defined as an individual's ability to perceive and understand their cognitive functions and use this understanding to regulate them. One of the key consequences of metacognitive impairments is the lack of insight in people with SUDs, which adversely affects treatment outcomes. Substance users with poor metacognition are more reluctant to initiate or continue treatment and are more likely to deny their cognitive problems. Therefore, improving metacognition may remove or reduce motivational barriers to invest time and effort in the recovery process in general, and in the brain recovery process specifically. Despite the importance of neurocognition and metacognition in the recovery process for substance users, there is a dearth of interventions designed to target these functions.
Detailed Description: To address this gap, the Neuroscience-Informed Psychoeducation for Addiction (NIPA) program was developed as one of the first initiatives in the field of SUDs to raise individuals' awareness about cognitive deficits (metacognition) associated with drug and alcohol use. NIPA is an app-based digital program that integrates neuroscience-based psychoeducation and game-based cognitive training. It consists of four 20-minute-long sessions covering neurocognitive functions commonly impaired in SUDs, such as attention, memory, cognitive flexibility, and impulsivity / decision-making. Each session includes videos, animations and cartoons depicting specific cognitive problems (e.g. in attention, decision-making, etc.), followed by games created by adapting common neurocognitive tasks (e.g. Stroop task, gambling task), designed to engage the specific cognitive function reviewed in the session and to raise individual's awareness of how they employ these cognitive functions to solve game-based puzzles and real-life problems. Each cognitive function is depicted in terms of the underlying brain network(s) (e.g. default mode network, salience network), which is followed by a set of brain training strategies and exercises that aim to improve resilience when exposed to substances and to motivate patients to invest time and effort in their treatment and to pursue cognitive rehabilitation interventions. The main goals of the proposed study are to determine whether the intervention is feasible and acceptable for patients with SUDs who are currently in treatment; and to obtain some preliminary data on its utility to increase metacognitive awareness, reduce depression and anxiety, and improve daily executive functioning and impulse control in patients with SUDs. We hypothesize that providing patients with the NIPA program may improve their metacognition, daily executive function, and mental health.
Study: NCT07178158
Study Brief:
Protocol Section: NCT07178158