Harmful Use Clinical Trials

1 recruiting

Harmful Use Trials at a Glance

7 actively recruiting trials for harmful use are listed on ClinicalTrialsFinder across 5 cities in 4 countries. The largest study group is Not Applicable with 3 trials, with the heaviest enrollment activity in Champaign, Columbia, and Lørenskog. Lead sponsors running harmful use studies include University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Helse Stavanger HF, and The University of Adelaide.

Browse harmful use trials by phase

Treatments under study

About Harmful Use Clinical Trials

Looking for clinical trials for Harmful Use? There are currently 1 studies actively recruiting participants. Clinical trials offer access to new treatments before they are widely available, and every approved therapy in use today was first tested through a clinical trial.

Below you can browse trials, sign up for alerts when new Harmful Use trials open, and view eligibility criteria for each study. Each listing includes the study phase, locations, and enrollment details.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about Harmful Use clinical trials

A clinical trial is a carefully designed research study that tests new medical treatments, drugs, devices, or approaches in human volunteers. Every approved medication and treatment available today was proven safe and effective through clinical trials.

All clinical trials are reviewed and approved by Institutional Review Boards (IRBs) — independent committees that evaluate patient safety. Trials follow strict protocols, and your health is monitored closely throughout. You can withdraw at any time.

Not necessarily. Many trials compare the new treatment against the current standard of care, meaning all participants receive active treatment. When placebos are used, they are typically combined with standard treatment, not given alone. The trial description will always specify the design.

Under the Affordable Care Act, most private insurers are required to cover routine patient care costs during a clinical trial. The sponsor typically covers the investigational treatment itself. Medicare also covers routine costs for qualifying trials.

Yes. Participation is completely voluntary. You can withdraw at any time, for any reason, without it affecting your access to standard medical care.

Each trial has specific eligibility criteria — including age, diagnosis, disease stage, prior treatments, and general health. Browse the trials listed above and check their eligibility sections. You can also contact the trial site directly to discuss your situation.

Showing 17 of 7 trials

Recruiting

Cannabis Abstinence and Neurocognitive Assessment in Adolescence

Cognitive AssessmentCannabis DependenceHarmful Use
University Hospital Pilsen29 enrolled1 locationNCT07160153
Recruiting
Not Applicable

Alcohol and the Social Brain: An Alcohol-Administration Hyperscanning Study Employing a Within-Subject Design

AlcoholismAlcohol DrinkingBinge Drinking+3 more
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign200 enrolled2 locationsNCT07125534
Recruiting
Not Applicable

Sleep as a Mechanism of Change in Alcohol Use

InsomniaAlcohol; Harmful Use
University of Missouri-Columbia256 enrolled1 locationNCT06286774
Recruiting

The Pitjantjatjara ASSIST: A project aimed at assessing the validity, reliability and cultural appropriateness of the digital, translated and culturally-adapted Alcohol, Smoking and Substance Involvement Screening Test (ASSIST), for use in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander populations.

inhalants dependenceharmful use of alcoholharmful use of cannabis+10 more
The University of Adelaide600 enrolled1 locationACTRN12625000413426
Recruiting
Not Applicable

Brief Intervention for Sleep Medication Misuse Among Elderly

Harmful Use of Hypnotic
University Hospital, Akershus120 enrolled1 locationNCT06032715
Recruiting

Alcohol and the Social Brain: an Alcohol-Administration Hyperscanning Study

AlcoholismAlcohol DrinkingBinge Drinking+3 more
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign240 enrolled1 locationNCT06687525
Recruiting

Patient Trajectories for Older Adults Admitted to Hospital for Alcohol-related Problems

Health Risk BehaviorsAlcohol ConsumptionAlcohol Dependence+1 more
Helse Stavanger HF500 enrolled1 locationNCT04164940