Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT03262233
Other study ID # 2017-0433
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase Phase 4
First received
Last updated
Start date April 1, 2015
Est. completion date February 20, 2018

Study information

Verified date April 2019
Source University of Wisconsin, Madison
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The objective of the current study is to evaluate the validity of the No Shock, Predictable Shock, Unpredictable Shock (NPU) stressor task for use as a surrogate endpoint to predict short-term clinical outcomes among smokers during a smoking cessation attempt.


Description:

Smokers recruited for this study are randomly assigned at a screening session to complete the NPU stressor task pre-quit or post-quit (i.e., nicotine deprived or non-deprived). Participants are also randomized to receive either placebo or active combination nicotine replacement therapy (NRT; patches and lozenges) for a two week smoking cessation period. The NPU stressor task measures stressor reactivity to predictable and unpredictable stressors (i.e., electric shock). Startle potentiation during predictable and unpredictable stressors (relative to no-shock) provides the primary measures of stressor reactivity in this task. Predictable and unpredictable startle potentiation are used to calculate overall stressor reactivity and selective unpredictable stressor reactivity. Further detail on these reactivity measures is provided in the Independent Variables section. Detail on the quantification of startle potentiation is provided at the end of this registration.

Smokers provide three weeks (1 week pre-quit, 2 weeks post-quit) of brief 4x daily, real-time web-survey reports of recent cigarette use, NRT use, and other measures not relevant to this study's purpose on the participants' smartphones. At two weeks post-quit, smokers are scheduled for a laboratory visit where participants provide an additional report via staff interview of any smoking during the two-week smoking cessation period.

The stressor reactivity measures from the NPU task will be tested as predictors of clinical outcome (i.e., continuous abstinence during the two-week cessation period) to evaluate the validity of each as surrogate endpoints for use in research on stress mechanisms in smoking relapse. Deprivation status at the time of the NPU stressor task will be examined as a moderator of the effect of stressor reactivity to determine if the surrogate endpoints predict clinical outcome generally or only as deprivation increases.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 226
Est. completion date February 20, 2018
Est. primary completion date February 20, 2018
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 18 Years to 60 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- cigarette use over 10 cigarettes/day for over two years;

- smoking within the first 30 minutes of waking up

- expired air carbon monoxide (CO) level >6 ppm

- self-reported motivation to quit smoking

- and an agreement to respond to ecological momentary assessment prompts (via SMS) throughout the day for three weeks.

Exclusion Criteria:

- Health screening are performed by questionnaire and reviewed by study staff (RA or Research Specialist) to ensure that smokers can safely use the nicotine patch and lozenge. Specifically, smokers will be excluded for FDA contraindications for nicotine replacement therapy (i.e., no uncontrolled hypertension, recent myocardial infarction, diabetes, heart disease, asthma, stomach ulcers).

- All women of child-bearing potential will be required to agree to use an approved method of birth control to prevent pregnancy during the course of the study.

- All participants will report no medical or psychiatric condition that would contraindicate exposure to electric shock.

- Participants with uncorrected auditory or visual problems will be excluded.

Additional Data Exclusions

1. As part of the NPU stressor task, smokers are asked to indicate if the participant "can be shocked in the next 5 seconds" at various points during the task. Responses to these questions are used to verify that the participant understands the cue-shock contingencies. Smokers who answer < 10 out of 14 questions correctly the NPU stressor task during the experimental session will be excluded from all analyses and replaced.

2. Smokers with 20% of cue trials identified as artifact in the NPU task will be excluded from all analyses and replaced.

3. The analysis will NOT exclude smokers who are startle non-responders given that the use of these surrogate endpoints in practice would likely need to include these individuals to avoid unnecessary data loss.

4. Smokers who do not report a complete abstinence between quit date/time and final laboratory visit (which occurs 12-36 hours later) will be considered to not have quit and will be excluded from all analyses and replaced.

5. Smokers for whom the investigators cannot definitively quantify an outcome with respect to continuous abstinence will be excluded from all analyses and replaced. Any report of smoking during the two-week cessation period (reported either during the 4x daily web surveys or the laboratory visit at 2 weeks) is sufficient to code the smoker to have lapsed (i.e., not continuously abstinent), even if the participants do not complete the full two weeks of web surveys and/or the 2-week laboratory visit. However, the status of smokers who report no smoking during the cessation attempt but have both a high level of missing data from the web surveys (> 25% of reports) and no two-week laboratory visit report will be deemed uncertain. These smokers will be excluded and replaced.

6. The investigators will conduct case analyses to identify participants who are model outliers with Bonferroni-corrected studentized residuals p < 0.05. These model outliers will be excluded but NOT replaced (because the participants are not identified until after data collection has been completed).

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Combination Product:
nicotine

Other:
placebo


Locations

Country Name City State
United States University of Wisconsin Madison Wisconsin

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University of Wisconsin, Madison

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Overall Stressor Reactivity The average of unpredictable startle potentiation and predictable startle potentiation during the first administration of the NPU stressor task. up to 24 hours after start of cessation attempt (deprived groups); during normal smoking prior to quit attempt, ie. Baseline (non-deprived groups)
Primary Relative Unpredictable Stressor Reactivity Unpredictable startle potentiation minus predictable startle potentiation during the first administration of the NPU stressor task up to 24 hours post cessation attempt (deprived groups); during normal smoking prior to quit attempt, ie. Baseline (non-deprived groups)
Primary Change in Overall Stressor Reactivity A difference score of overall stressor reactivity during the second administration of the NPU stressor task relative to the first NPU stressor task baseline and up to 14 days post cessation attempt (non-deprived groups); baseline and up to 24 hours post quit attempt (deprived groups)
Primary Change in Relative Unpredictable Stressor Reactivity A difference score of relative unpredictable stressor reactivity during the second administration of the NPU stressor task relative to the first NPU stressor task baseline and up to 14 days post cessation attempt (non-deprived groups); baseline and up to 24 hours post quit attempt (deprived groups)
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
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