Nicotine Dependence Clinical Trial
Official title:
A 10-Week Pilot Study of Varenicline (Champix) Versus Placebo for Smoking Cessation/Reduction in Patients With Bipolar Disorder
Bipolar Disorder is a chronic relapsing mental disorder characterized by periods of
elevated, expansive and irritable mood, often alternating with periods of significant
clinical depression. People with Bipolar Disorder are typically heavy smokers who have
difficulty quitting, and this is associated with significant tobacco-related medical illness
and death.
The proposed study will be a double-blind, placebo-controlled 10-week clinical trial of the
safety and efficacy of varenicline (Champix™) in thirty subjects with Bipolar I Disorder.
This medication is the latest first-line pharmacotherapy for smoking cessation and has been
shown to be efficacious for smoking cessation, but has not yet been systematically studied
in persons with Bipolar Disorder.
Varenicline (VAR) is a α4β2 central nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) partial
agonist. It is believed to mimic the effect of nicotine by stimulating nAChRs and releasing
sufficient dopamine in order to reduce craving and withdrawal effects. In the past two years
since the approval of VAR there have been some increasing concerns about this medication,
particularly in psychiatric smokers. Besides the typical side effects of nausea and
insomnia, it has been associated with treatment-emergent suicidality, aggression, psychosis,
and induction of hypomania or mania.
Study Design:
Thirty nicotine-dependent cigarette smokers with Bipolar I Disorder will be enrolled (N=30).
All subjects will be symptomatically stable prior to enrollment, and compliant with their
mood-stabilizer medication treatment to minimize the chances of adverse outcomes. The
treatment group would receive flexible doses of varenicline (VAR) ranging from one to four
capsules (0.5-2.0 mg) orally per day. The control group would receive one to four capsules
of placebo VAR (0 mg) orally per day. All subjects would receive weekly Cognitive Behavioral
Therapy (CBT) offered in group format to help them deal with tobacco cravings and mood
management. The target quit date would be set during Week 3 of the trial. Comprehensive
neuropsychological assessment and laboratory testing will be given at baseline and ten
weeks;
Hypotheses:
1. Varenicline will be superior to placebo for smoking cessation outcomes.
2. Varenicline will be well-tolerated and safe for use in Bipolar I smokers in comparison
to placebo.
3. Varenicline will reduce smoking indices (Carbon monoxide, cotinine) and have minimal
effects on psychiatric symptomatology in mood-stabilizer treated Bipolar I smoking
patients.
4. The presence of prefrontal cortical, impulsivity and attentional deficits on the
baseline neuropsychological battery will predict smoking cessation treatment failure in
Bipolar I smokers.
Significance:
- This would be the first placebo-controlled clinical trial using varenicline for the
treatment of tobacco dependence in people with Bipolar Disorder.
- There is an immense need for a safe and effective smoking cessation therapy for smokers
with bipolar illness. The co-morbidity between the major psychiatric disorders and
nicotine dependence has been well established. The prevalence of cigarette smoking in
patients with bipolar disorder is approximately 50-70% as compared to ~19% in the
Canadian population. Moreover, smokers with Bipolar Disorder suffer to a higher extent
from smoking-related illnesses than non-psychiatric smokers.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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