Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The transdermal nicotine patch is the most widely used form of tobacco dependence treatment in the US and Europe, but most smokers are unable to successfully quit with this form of treatment. Failure to respond to this treatment may, to a large extent, be due to the use of nicotine patches for only 8 weeks, the recommended treatment duration. We have found in a controlled randomized clinical trial that using the nicotine patch for 24 weeks can increase quit rates significantly. We propose here a clinical trial to replicate and extend these results to a community setting in the real-world, using the same research design utilized in clinical trials to demonstrate the effectiveness of methadone maintenance therapy for opiate dependence. Specifically, 540 smokers will receive counseling and standard (8-weeks), extended (24-weeks), or maintenance (52 weeks) therapy with transdermal nicotine patches. The main outcome is biochemically-verified smoking cessation at week 52. The cost-effectiveness, safety, and mechanism of effect (e.g., promotion of recovery following a lapse) for maintenance therapy with transdermal nicotine will also be assessed. The study results may change how we treat nicotine dependence with transdermal nicotine.


Clinical Trial Description

The transdermal nicotine patch is the most widely used form of tobacco dependence treatment in the US and Europe. Yet, abstinence rates following patch treatment are only ~20% at 6-months and ~9% at 12-months. There is a growing recognition that nicotine dependence is a chronic disease, like asthma or diabetes, which requires maintenance therapy. While current guidelines established by the USDHHS's Public Health Service (PHS) recommend 8-week duration for transdermal nicotine therapy, support for this recommendation is limited. In a recent randomized placebo-controlled efficacy trial comparing standard (8-week) vs. extended (24-weeks) treatment with nicotine patches, we found that, at 24 weeks, point-prevalence abstinence rates were 30% in the 24-week arm vs. 20% in the standard therapy arm (p < .05); however, by week 52, 6 months after treatment was discontinued for the extended treatment arm, the quit rates were equivalent across the treatment arms. This was the first clinical trial to suggest that the benefits of extended treatment with transdermal nicotine are largely dependent on the continuation of active treatment. However, as an efficacy trial, this study was conducted under highly-controlled conditions with strict inclusion/exclusion criteria to enhance internal validity. If recommendations for the duration of nicotine patch therapy are to be formally revised to encourage maintenance therapy, these findings must be replicated and extended under "real-world circumstances" in an effectiveness trial. In addition, as done in clinical trials to support the use of methadone maintenance for opiate dependence, a replication study must include a treatment arm that receives maintenance therapy throughout the duration of the trial (52 weeks). Thus, we propose to conduct a randomized effectiveness trial to evaluate the benefits of maintenance therapy with transdermal nicotine patches for smoking cessation. Specifically, 540 smokers will receive brief counseling and will be randomized to: standard (8-weeks), extended (24-weeks), or maintenance (52 weeks) transdermal nicotine therapy. The primary outcome will be biochemically verified 7-day point prevalence abstinence at week 52. Additional study aims include assessing: 1) treatment side effects across study arms; 2) longitudinal patterns of relapse and recovery across treatment arms; 3) mediators and moderators of treatment effects; and 4) cost-effectiveness. Overall, the trial findings will provide critical data for future PHS reviews of maintenance therapy with transdermal nicotine for subsequent treatment guidelines; for third-party payer assessments of maintenance transdermal nicotine as a covered benefit; and for individual smokers' decisions to use maintenance transdermal nicotine through over-the-counter access. In turn, this study may help to attain the Healthy People 2010 goals of reducing the US rate of tobacco use. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT01047527
Study type Interventional
Source University of Pennsylvania
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Phase 4
Start date June 2009
Completion date April 2014

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT05176418 - IV Pulsed-Nicotine as a Model of Smoking: The Effects of Dose and Delivery Rate Early Phase 1
Completed NCT04084210 - Impact of Alternative Nicotine-Delivery Products on Combustible Cigarette Use Phase 2
Completed NCT04043728 - Addressing Psychological Risk Factors Underlying Smoking Persistence in COPD Patients: The Fresh Start Study N/A
Withdrawn NCT03707600 - State and Trait Mediated Response to TMS in Substance Use Disorder N/A
Recruiting NCT03999099 - Targeting Orexin to Treat Nicotine Dependence Phase 1
Completed NCT03847155 - Prevention of Nicotine Abstinence in Critically Ill Patients After Major Surgery N/A
Completed NCT02840435 - Study on Sit to Quit Phone Intervention N/A
Completed NCT02139930 - Project 2: Strategies for Reducing Nicotine Content in Cigarettes N/A
Completed NCT01982110 - A Mindfulness Based Application for Smoking Cessation N/A
Completed NCT01926626 - Evaluation of Moclobemide, a Reversible MAO-A Inhibitor, as an Adjunct to Nicotine Replacement Therapy in Female Smokers Phase 2
Completed NCT01569490 - Striving to Quit: First Breath N/A
Withdrawn NCT01569477 - Striving to Quit-Wisconsin Tobacco Quit Line N/A
Completed NCT01632189 - The Effect of Varenicline on D2/D3 Receptor Binding in Smokers N/A
Completed NCT01685996 - Zonisamide Augmentation of Varenicline Treatment for Smoking Cessation Phase 1/Phase 2
Active, not recruiting NCT01182766 - New Treatment for Alcohol and Nicotine Dependence Phase 2/Phase 3
Completed NCT01061528 - Coping Skills Treatment for Smoking Cessation N/A
Completed NCT00996034 - Nicotine Vaccination and Nicotinic Receptor Occupancy Phase 2
Withdrawn NCT01589081 - Effects of Progesterone on IV Nicotine-Induced Changes in Hormones and Subjective Ratings of Stimulant Drug Effect N/A
Completed NCT01943994 - Psilocybin-facilitated Smoking Cessation Treatment: A Pilot Study N/A
Suspended NCT01636336 - Effects of Progesterone on Smoked Nicotine Induced Changes in Hormones and Subjective Ratings of Stimulant Drug Effects N/A