Schizophrenia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Evaluating the Effects of Varenicline on Smoking Lapse in Smokers With and Without Schizophrenia: Implications for Treatment
The objective of this study is to determine the mechanisms by which varenicline, an effective smoking cessation treatment, protects against relapse. Varenicline will be administered in smokers with schizophrenia and control smokers using a randomized, double-blind, cross-over design. Smokers will be asked to stop smoking overnight; the next day the ability to resist smoking will be assessed in a laboratory smoking lapse paradigm. Measures of tobacco craving, reinforcement and withdrawal-related cognitive dysfunction will be correlated with time to lapse. The results could have significant clinical implications by identifying mechanisms by which smokers with schizophrenia are at more risk for relapse than the general population, leading to the development of more effective smoking cessation therapies.
One way to facilitate medication development for smoking cessation is through the use of
human laboratory paradigms that can provide an efficient, cost-effective and mechanistic
evaluation of a medication signal on smoking behavior and bridge pre-clinical studies and
costly clinical trials. This study will take advantage of the recent development and
validation of a smoking lapse procedure to evaluate the effects of varenicline in smokers
with and without schizophrenia. We will extend our recent work with varenicline by relating
its effects on reinforcement, craving and cognition to clinical outcome (i.e., lapse - a
strong predictor of relapse). It is pertinent to study smokers with schizophrenia because as
smoking rates decline in the general population we will be left with a group of'hardcore'
smokers for whom current smoking cessation strategies have limited efficacy.
The objective of this study is to determine the effect of varenicline versus placebo, on
time to lapse, as a function of craving, reinforcement and cognitive dysfunction, in smokers
with and without schizophrenia. We hypothesize that:
1. Smokers with schizophrenia will have reduced ability to resist smoking during the
placebo condition compared to controls; and secondarily, this will be related to the
higher levels of cognitive dysfunction during abstinence.
2. Varenicline will increase the ability to resist smoking in both control and
schizophrenia smokers; and secondarily, this will be mediated via its effects on
cognition in smokers with schizophrenia, and its effects on craving in control smokers.
The exploratory aims are to determine:
1. Varenicline's effect on cue-reactivity in smokers with and without schizophrenia and
its relationship to time to lapse.
2. Varenicline's effects on tobacco reinforcement and its relationship to ad lib smoking
in the lapse period
The current study will advance the development of tobacco addiction treatments in the
following ways: 1) Identification of mechanisms by which varenicline facilitates abstinence
in different subtypes of smokers (schizophrenia vs. controls) is critical to improve
treatment response. 2) Identification of predictors of relapse in different subtypes of
smokers (schizophrenia vs. controls) could guide future medication development efforts. 3)
Relating measures of tobacco abstinence and addiction collected in the laboratory to proxy
measures of treatment outcome (i.e., smoking lapse) will provide further validation that
evaluation of medications in such paradigms is a useful and cost-effective screening
strategy. 4) Our approach could also be used to identify smokers most at risk for tobacco
abstinence symptoms who would benefit from treatments targeting the most prominent aspects
of withdrawal. This could lead to improved health outcomes in smokers.
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