Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT03098004 |
Other study ID # |
HS-16-00630 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
January 1, 2017 |
Est. completion date |
August 31, 2019 |
Study information
Verified date |
July 2023 |
Source |
University of Southern California |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
This behavioral pharmacology laboratory experiment will assess whether sweet (vs. non-sweet)
flavored e-cigarette solutions reduce tobacco withdrawal symptoms and motivation to smoke
among 40 smokers interested in trying e-cigarettes (for the first time) following 16-hours of
nicotine abstinence. The study's experimental design will provide evidence of the causal
effects of e-cigarette flavorings on a putatively critical factor for determining whether
smokers continue e-cigarette use after initial trial-the ability of a product to suppress
withdrawal and motivation to smoke during periods of tobacco deprivation.
Description:
Nicotine withdrawal symptoms (e.g., increased negative affect, decreased positive affect,
cigarette craving) are a core component of cigarette dependence that emerge upon the absence
of nicotine administration, maintaining cigarette smoking and inhibiting cessation efforts.
The use of electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes) has increased dramatically in recent years,
with studies demonstrating that e-cigarettes can reduce nicotine withdrawal symptoms during
acute cigarette abstinence. E-cigarettes with flavorings that simulate the sweet taste of
fruit, candy and other sugary foods and beverages are widely available, commonly used and are
frequently cited as a reason for the persistent use of e-cigarettes. During nicotine
withdrawal, sweet flavors have been shown to reduce nicotine withdrawal symptoms.
Additionally, a recent USC TCORS (Tobacco Center of Regulatory Science) administrative
supplement study conducted at the University of Southern California (USC) Health, Emotion,
and Addiction Laboratory (USC-HEAL) found that sweet-flavored solutions enhanced the appeal
of e-cigarettes, independent of nicotine. However, the impact of e-cigarette flavorings on
nicotine withdrawal symptoms is currently unknown. This behavioral pharmacology laboratory
experiment will assess whether sweet (vs. non-sweet) flavored e-cigarette solutions reduce
tobacco withdrawal symptoms and motivation to smoke among 40 smokers interested in trying
e-cigarettes (for the first time) following 16-hours of nicotine abstinence. At each visit,
participants will complete a standardized e-cigarette administration procedure, as developed
in our prior work, in which flavor will be manipulated in a double-blind, cross-over,
counterbalanced design. Following the e-cigarette administration, participants will complete:
1) self-report measures of nicotine withdrawal symptoms; 2) physiological measurements and 3)
a behavioral task that measures participants' ability to resist the desire to resume smoking
under conditions in which it is advantageous to remain abstinent (i.e., monetary payment for
each successive 5-min increment in which smoking is delayed). The study's experimental design
will provide evidence of the causal effects of e-cigarette flavorings on a putatively
critical factor for determining whether smokers continue e-cigarette use after initial
trial-the ability of a product to suppress withdrawal and motivation to smoke during periods
of tobacco deprivation.