Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT02500589
Other study ID # IIR 11-300
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date May 31, 2016
Est. completion date April 19, 2019

Study information

Verified date July 2023
Source VA Office of Research and Development
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

Smoking is the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in the U.S. Interventions that increase successful quit attempts among depressed smokers with chronic medical illnesses are particularly important for the VA healthcare system because rates of tobacco use, depression, and chronic medical illnesses are significantly higher among Veterans compared to the general population. Providing smoking cessation services augmented with mood management to Veterans via telephone may increase access to, and utilization of, evidence-based smoking cessation counseling and decrease rates of smoking-related complications for Veterans with chronic medical illnesses and depression. Yet, the reach of smoking cessation telephone counseling has been limited among populations with mental illness. The investigators intend to combine the potency of co-delivered mood management and reach of telephone-delivered interventions by testing the telephone delivery of behavioral mood-management for smoking cessation among smokers with depression and chronic medical illness.


Description:

Purpose: Cigarette smoking is the single greatest cause of preventable deaths. In the VA health care system, patients with chronic medical illnesses represent an important population on which to focus smoking cessation efforts. Smoking cessation among patients with chronic medical illnesses can substantially decrease morbidity and mortality. Despite these benefits, many patients with chronic medical illnesses continue to smoke. There is a strong interrelationship between depression and chronic medical illness. Depression can derail sustained smoking cessation and may be an important barrier to smoking cessation for Veterans with chronic medical illness. Despite the barriers they face, smokers with depression are motivated to quit smoking. Smokers with histories of depression may respond better to smoking cessation interventions that are augmented with mood-management adjuncts such as mood-management counseling. Thus, depressed smokers are more likely to quit when behavioral mood-management is added to traditional cessation approaches. Yet, the augmentation of smoking cessation with behavioral mood management is not yet firmly established. Also these intensive interventions have limited reach when conducted in person. Telephone counseling can deliver intensive and effective treatment to people who smoke, yet its implementation has been limited among smoker with depression. There is a need to develop novel proactive telephone-delivered approaches that can broadly deliver intensive smoking cessation interventions to Veterans who may not respond to standard care, such as those with chronic medical illnesses and depressive symptoms. Methodology: The investigators propose a randomized comparative effectiveness trial with a two-group design in which 350 Veteran smokers with depression and chronic medical illness will be randomized to either: 1) smoking cessation plus adjunctive behavioral mood management (SMK-MM group), an intervention that includes a proactive telehealth intervention that combines evidence-based smoking cessation counseling augmented with behavioral mood management and a tele-medicine clinic for accessing nicotine replacement therapy (NRT), or 2) smoking cessation telephone counseling control (SMK CONTROL), a contact-equivalent control that provides the same smoking cessation telephone counseling intervention augmented with health education (instead of mood-management) and a tele-medicine clinic for accessing NRT. Patients with chronic medical illnesses will be identified from patient intake systems of the Durham Veteran's Affairs Hospital and screened for tobacco use and depressive symptoms. The main outcome in this trial is prolonged abstinence at 6-month and 12-month follow-up. Logistic regression will be used to test for a between-group difference in the proportion of patients with self-reported prolonged abstinence from cigarettes at 6 months. A general linear mixed model will be used to estimate changes depressive symptoms between groups. If there is a significant intervention effect on smoking cessation, mediational analysis will be conducted to examine whether changes in self-efficacy or affect mediate the impact of the mood management intervention. Objectives: The specific aims of the study are to 1) evaluate the impact of a telephone-delivered smoking cessation intervention augmented with behavioral mood management on rates of prolonged and point prevalence abstinence from cigarettes among Veterans with chronic medical illnesses and depression; 2) monitor the impact of behavioral mood management intervention on depressive symptoms; 3) if effective, assess whether change in self-efficacy as well as positive and negative affect mediate the impact of behavioral mood management intervention on smoking cessation among Veterans; and 4) assess the cost-effectiveness if the mood-enhanced intervention.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 350
Est. completion date April 19, 2019
Est. primary completion date April 19, 2019
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group N/A and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: Patients must meet all of the following inclusion criteria: - 1.Enrolled in the Durham VAMC for ongoing care - 2.Current tobacco smokers planning to quit smoking in the next 30 days - 3.Having received a diagnosis of a qualifying chronic illness (i.e., cancer, cardiovascular disease, hypertension, diabetes, COPD) - 4.Have significant burden of depressive symptoms (i.e., meets DSM threshold for > 3 of the nine MDD criterion symptoms at the threshold of "more than half the days" (one symptom must be depressed mood or anhedonia; endorsing "some days" meets criteria for self-harm) and endorse functional impairment OR receive a summary score 10 or above on PHQ-9. Exclusion Criteria: Patients who meet any one of the following exclusion criteria will be excluded: - 1.Active diagnosis of psychosis or dementia in their medical records - 2.Severely impaired hearing or speech - 3.Lack of telephone access - 4.Enrollment in another research study that might affect the main outcomes of this study - 5.Terminal illness - 6. Behavioral flag in medical record - 7. Active suicidal ideation flag in medical record - 8. Endorses thoughts of self-harm and is a greater than minimal risk of suicide

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Behavioral:
Behavioral mood management
The mood-management sessions are informed by CBT and emphasize psycho-educational and skills-based approaches to CBT. CBT has been used extensively to address mood management. Specifically, SMK-MM enhancement includes behavioral activation, cognitive restructuring (working with automatic thoughts, problem solving, and behavioral skills (i.e., activity scheduling, relaxation training/controlled breathing). The SMK-MM-enhanced participant manual will also include additional worksheets developed for the investigator's pilot based on Lewinsohn's self-help guide to controlling depression. The main objective of the worksheets will be to provide Veterans with an opportunity to gain mastery over selected behavioral and cognitive skills thought to facilitate mood management. As is customary in CBT, homework based on the worksheets will be discussed during counseling calls.
Other:
Health education
In the contact-equivalent health education condition, participants will receive parallel smoking cessation content on the same schedule as in the MM-enhanced arm; however, health education content will supplant the MM content. The educational content will be based on the VA National Center on Health Promotion and Disease Prevention's "Health Living Messages" on such topics as being safe, eating wisely, getting recommended immunization and screening tests, and being involved with the participant's health care. Participants also will receive chronic-disease-specific self-management information.

Locations

Country Name City State
United States Durham VA Medical Center, Durham, NC Durham North Carolina

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
VA Office of Research and Development

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Number of Participants With Prolonged Abstinence In keeping with the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco recommendations for measuring abstinence, the investigators use prolonged abstinence as the main outcome and allow for a grace period around quit date. During the 6-month follow-ups, patients will be asked about prolonged abstinence, "Since [end of the grace period] has the participant ever smoked at least a part of a cigarette on each of 7 consecutive days?" and "After [end of the grace period] has the participant smoked any in each of 2 consecutive weeks?" Responding "no" to these questions is considered having obtained prolonged abstinence (ie., smoking cessation). Data below reflect the participants responding "no." 6 month
Primary Number of Participants With Prolonged Abstinence In keeping with the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco recommendations for measuring abstinence, the investigators use prolonged abstinence as the main outcome and allow for a grace period around quit date. During the 12-month follow-ups, patients will be asked about prolonged abstinence, "Since [end of the grace period] has the participant ever smoked at least a part of a cigarette on each of 7 consecutive days?" and "After [end of the grace period] has the participant smoked any in each of 2 consecutive weeks?" Responding "no" to these questions is considered having obtained prolonged abstinence (ie., smoking cessation). Data below reflect the participants responding "no." 12 month
Secondary Number of Participants With 7 Day Point Prevalent Abstinence At each follow-up (6 month), participants will be asked whether they have smoked a cigarette, even a puff, in the past 7 days and, if no, will then be asked whether the participant has smoked a cigarette, even a puff, in the past 30 days. Data presented below represents those who self-reported not smoking. Month 6
Secondary Change in PHQ-9 (Patient Depression Questionnaire) Score From Baseline to 6-months Patients were asked the frequency with which they experienced symptoms indicative of depression in the past two weeks. This measure can be used to assess Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM) criterion symptoms for Major Depressive Disorder (MDD), assess depression severity, and assess suicidal ideations. The Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) performs similarly across sociodemographic groups (i.e., age, race, sex) and mode of administration (e.g., patient self-report). The PHQ-9 score can range from 0 to 27, with higher scores representing higher symptom burden. We calculated the change in PHQ-9 scores from baseline to 6 month follow-up assessment. Negative scores indicate a reduction in depression symptom burden. change from baseline to 6 month follow up
Secondary Change in PHQ-9 (Patient Depression Questionnaire) Score From Baseline to 12 Month Follow up Patients were asked the frequency with which they experienced symptoms indicative of depression in the past two weeks. This measure can be used to assess Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM) criterion symptoms for Major Depressive Disorder (MDD), assess depression severity, and assess suicidal ideations. The Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) performs similarly across sociodemographic groups (i.e., age, race, sex) and mode of administration (e.g., patient self-report). The PHQ-9 score can range from 0 to 27, with higher scores representing higher symptom burden. We calculated the change in PHQ-9 scores from baseline to 12 month follow-up assessment. Negative scores indicate a reduction in depression symptom burden. change from baseline to 12 month follow up
Secondary Biochemical Verification of Smoking Cessation at 6 Month Follow up Saliva samples will be collected from participants who report not smoking in the last 7 days to biochemically validate self-report smoking status. Samples will be collected by mail within a 2-week window following the telephone interview. Data presented below represents those who were confirmed to be not smoking at 6 months via biochemical validation of of saliva samples. 6 month follow up
Secondary Number of Participants With 7 Day Point Prevalent Abstinence At each follow-up (12-month), participants will be asked whether they have smoked a cigarette, even a puff, in the past 7 days and, if no, will then be asked whether the participant has smoked a cigarette, even a puff, in the past 30 days. Data presented below represents those who self-reported not smoking. 12 month
Secondary Biochemical Verification of Smoking Cessation at 12 Month Follow up Saliva samples will be collected from participants who report not smoking in the last 7 days to biochemically validate self-report smoking status. Samples will be collected by mail within a 2-week window following the telephone interview. Data presented below represents those who were confirmed to be not smoking at 12 months via biochemical validation of of saliva samples. 12 month follow up
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 NCT01926626 - Evaluation of Moclobemide, a Reversible MAO-A Inhibitor, as an Adjunct to Nicotine Replacement Therapy in Female Smokers Phase 2
Completed NCT01982110 - A Mindfulness Based Application for Smoking Cessation N/A
Completed NCT01632189 - The Effect of Varenicline on D2/D3 Receptor Binding in Smokers N/A
Completed NCT01569490 - Striving to Quit: First Breath N/A
Completed NCT01685996 - Zonisamide Augmentation of Varenicline Treatment for Smoking Cessation Phase 1/Phase 2
Withdrawn NCT01569477 - Striving to Quit-Wisconsin Tobacco Quit Line N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT01182766 - New Treatment for Alcohol and Nicotine Dependence Phase 2/Phase 3
Completed NCT00996034 - Nicotine Vaccination and Nicotinic Receptor Occupancy Phase 2
Completed NCT01061528 - Coping Skills Treatment for Smoking Cessation N/A
Suspended NCT01636336 - Effects of Progesterone on Smoked Nicotine Induced Changes in Hormones and Subjective Ratings of Stimulant Drug Effects N/A
Completed NCT01943994 - Psilocybin-facilitated Smoking Cessation Treatment: A Pilot Study N/A
Withdrawn NCT01589081 - Effects of Progesterone on IV Nicotine-Induced Changes in Hormones and Subjective Ratings of Stimulant Drug Effect N/A