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Experimental evaluation of the mechanisms driving acute stress potentiation of drug cue reactivity in Cannabis Use Disorder

NIDA - National Institute on Drug Abuse

open
OpenLast verified: 2026-06-20

About This Grant

Project Summary. The prevalence of daily cannabis use and cannabis use disorder (CUD) has increased in the United States over the past two decades. Unfortunately, psychosocial treatments produce minimal long- term abstinence rates and no FDA-approved medications for CUD exist. Thus, identifying novel CUD treatment targets is an increasingly urgent public health need. Stress-elicited cannabis use motivation has been implicated in worse CUD outcomes, but a mechanistic understanding of how acute stress increases cannabis use motivation in CUD is limited. The PI’s work has demonstrated that acute psychosocial stress enhancement of subsequent cannabis cue incentive salience, as indexed by the late positive potential (neural measure of approach-motivated attention recorded using electroencephalography [EEG]), was associated with worse CUD severity and intervention response, independent of subjective craving. Moreover, hypothalamic pituitary adrenal [HPA]-axis, rather than noradrenergic or subjective reactivity to the psychosocial stressor was associated with subsequent potentiation of the cannabis cue-elicited late positive potential. These studies suggest that non-genomic, rapid glucocorticoid effects may be a contributing mechanism in stress amplification of neural drug-cue reactivity, but their correlational designs preclude causal inference. Further, psychosocial stressors are unable to isolate HPA-axis vs. noradrenergic components of stress reactivity. To isolate HPA- axis activation and test causality, pharmacological manipulations, common in animal models but rare in human studies, will be used to produce separate and co-operative glucocorticoid (hydrocortisone) and noradrenergic (yohimbine) activation. We will employ a 2x2 randomized, placebo-controlled double-blind crossover design in 36 cannabis users with severe CUD. Our primary aim is to test the causal potentiating effect of glucocorticoids on neural drug-cue reactivity, and further determine if the effect depends on co-occurring noradrenergic stimulation. Preclinical work indicates that glucocorticoids can potentiate reward motivation via mobilization of endocannabinoid activity (primary target of cannabis). Thus, as an exploratory aim in line with NIDA priorities (NOT-DA-22-048), we will obtain plasma samples to test the impact of pharmacological stress on circulating endocannabinoids and their mediating role in glucocorticoid potentiation of neural drug-cue reactivity. This project represents a highly novel integration of a rigorous pharmacological challenge design with biological markers of drug-cue incentive salience and endocannabinoid system activity. If hypotheses are confirmed, one causal mechanism through which stress increases neural cannabis cue reactivity will be known, which has immediate implications for testing experimental therapeutics. The long-term goal is to understand how a stress- related mechanism predictive of worse CUD phenotype is generated and can be blocked in CUD. Development of this model will provide a valid, efficient and (relative to other neuroimaging methods) low-cost approach to screen candidate medications and optimize psychosocial drug cue exposure therapies.

Grant Summary

Experimental evaluation of the mechanisms driving acute stress potentiation of drug cue reactivity in Cannabis Use Disorder is a NIDA - National Institute on Drug Abuse grant providing up to $151K for university, nonprofit, healthcare org. Applications are due 2027-04-30 (open). Check eligibility and apply with FindGrants.

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Focus Areas

health research

Eligibility

universitynonprofithealthcare org

How to Apply

Funding Range

Up to $151K

Deadline

2027-04-30

Complexity
Medium
  1. 1Confirm your organization is eligible for Experimental evaluation of the mechanisms driving acute stress potentiation of drug cue reactivity in Cannabis Use Disorder from NIDA - National Institute on Drug Abuse, checking organization type, location, and any population or project requirements.
  2. 2Gather the required documents and information, including your organization details, project plan, and budget figures.
  3. 3Draft your application narrative and budget addressing the funder's priorities and review criteria. FindGrants can draft each section for you to review and edit.
  4. 4Review every section against the requirements checklist, then export a submission-ready application pack and submit it to NIDA - National Institute on Drug Abuse before the deadline.
This record is a past award, contract, or funder profile — useful for research, but not an open grant application. Check the original source for current opportunities from this funder.

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Experimental evaluation of the mechanisms driving acute stress potentiation of drug cue reactivity in Cannabis Use Disorder: Frequently Asked Questions

Who is eligible for the Experimental evaluation of the mechanisms driving acute stress potentiation of drug cue reactivity in Cannabis Use Disorder?

Experimental evaluation of the mechanisms driving acute stress potentiation of drug cue reactivity in Cannabis Use Disorder is offered by NIDA - National Institute on Drug Abuse and is generally open to university, nonprofit, healthcare org. It is open to organizations nationwide unless the funder specifies otherwise. Review the specific eligibility terms before applying, since funders set their own requirements around organization type, location, and the population or project being served.

How much funding does the Experimental evaluation of the mechanisms driving acute stress potentiation of drug cue reactivity in Cannabis Use Disorder provide?

Experimental evaluation of the mechanisms driving acute stress potentiation of drug cue reactivity in Cannabis Use Disorder provides up to $151K per award from NIDA - National Institute on Drug Abuse. Actual award sizes depend on the scope of your project, available program funds, and the number of applicants, so build a budget that reflects realistic, allowable costs rather than the maximum figure.

When is the Experimental evaluation of the mechanisms driving acute stress potentiation of drug cue reactivity in Cannabis Use Disorder deadline?

Applications for Experimental evaluation of the mechanisms driving acute stress potentiation of drug cue reactivity in Cannabis Use Disorder are due 2027-04-30 (open). Because deadlines can change, verify the date with the funder, NIDA - National Institute on Drug Abuse, and give yourself enough time to prepare a complete, competitive application before the close date.

How do you apply for the Experimental evaluation of the mechanisms driving acute stress potentiation of drug cue reactivity in Cannabis Use Disorder?

To apply for Experimental evaluation of the mechanisms driving acute stress potentiation of drug cue reactivity in Cannabis Use Disorder, confirm your eligibility, gather the required documents, and prepare a narrative and budget that address the funder's priorities. FindGrants guides you step by step and can draft each section, then exports a submission-ready application pack for this grant from NIDA - National Institute on Drug Abuse.