Smoking Cessation Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Safety of Transdermal Nicotine Immediately Following an Acute Coronary Syndrome: The STADIA Pilot Study
Continuing to smoke after having a heart attack greatly increases the risk of death and cardiac illness. The nicotine patch is a commonly used pharmacotherapy for smoking cessation and has great potential to help heart attack patients quit smoking. However, due to safety concerns, physicians are often hesitant to prescribe the nicotine patch to patients who have just suffered a heart attack. The STADIA pilot study will assess the feasibility of a large-scale clinical trial investigating safety and efficacy outcomes associated with the nicotine patch immediately following a heart attack. Eligible subjects will be randomized within 48 hours of suffering a heart attack to wear a transdermal nicotine patch on either day 1 or day 2 of the study period. The nicotine patch will deliver nicotine to the patient over the period of 24 hours. Patients will be advised to discuss smoking cessation strategies with their treating physician and subsequent care will be left to the discretion of this physician. The duration of ischemia (loss of blood flow in the heart), patient adherence, incidence of arrhythmia (disorder of the heart rate or rhythm), heart rate, and blood pressure within the two groups will be used to evaluate the safety of transdermal nicotine use immediately after a heart attack.
Objective
The STADIA Pilot Study will be used to evaluate the feasibility of conducting a three-year
multi-centre trial investigating the long-term safety and efficacy outcomes associated with
transdermal nicotine use immediately following an acute coronary syndrome (ACS).
Rationale
Patients who initially survive an ACS are at high risk of recurrent cardiac events or
cardiovascular death. Within the first 6 months alone, 12% of patients will die or suffer
another ACS, while another 23% will require revascularization for angina. Patients who are
able to quit smoking reduce their chances of suffering a recurrent ACS or cardiovascular
death within the next year by ≥ 50%. After surviving an ACS, most patients are highly
motivated to stop smoking. However, as nicotine is an extremely addictive psychoactive drug,
up to 60% of patients who attempt to quit relapse. Hospitalization following an ACS provides
an opportunity for smokers to quit, as smoking while in hospital is prohibited. However,
abstinence while hospitalized also precipitates intense nicotine withdrawal symptoms, which
are largely responsible for the high rates of smoking relapse. Nicotine replacement therapy
(NRT) can ameliorate many of these symptoms and increase the chances that smokers continue
to abstain from tobacco use after discharge. Of the available NRTs, transdermal nicotine is
associated with the least severe cardiovascular effects, as it delivers nicotine more
gradually (with lower peak values) than nicotine gum or inhalers. Although transdermal
nicotine more than doubles long-term smoking cessation rates when compared with placebo, it
is rarely prescribed by physicians in the weeks immediately following an ACS because the
possible cardiovascular effects of nicotine after an ACS have yet to be systematically
evaluated.
Methods
A total of 30 patients will be randomized within 48-hours of suffering an ACS from the
Jewish General Hospital (Montreal, QC) and collaborating centres. Prior to randomization,
all patients will receive standardized smoking cessation counselling. Subjects who satisfy
the inclusion and exclusion criteria for the trial will be randomized within 48 hours of
suffering an ACS to wear a transdermal nicotine patch on either day 1 or day 2 of the study
period. Subjects will apply a patch the morning of their treatment day and keep it on for 24
hours. Patients will be advised to discuss smoking cessation strategies with their treating
physician and subsequent care will be left to the discretion of this physician. Twenty-four
hour Holter monitoring will be used to measure heart rate, incidence of arrhythmia, and the
duration of ischemic events at day 1 and day 2 of the study period. Systolic and diastolic
blood pressure will be assessed via 24-hour Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM).
ABPM will be used on day 1 and day 2 of the study period. On day 1 the study nurse will
record the severity of nicotine withdrawal symptoms, side effects, any smoking relapses and
if so, how many cigarettes were smoked, and any medications they are currently taking. On
day 7 and 14 patients will be contacted by telephone to determine the severity of nicotine
withdrawal symptoms, any smoking relapses and if so, how many cigarettes were smoked and any
medications they are currently taking. Cardiovascular events will be assessed by patient
monitoring and by a study nurse. Nicotine withdrawal symptoms according to the
Hughes-Hatsukami symptom scale and common nicotine patch side effects, severity-rated on a
five-point scale, will be determined through study nurse inquiries on days 1, 7, and 14 (6).
Carbon monoxide monitors will be used to measure levels of expired CO at baseline.
Participants whose levels of expired CO exceed 10 ppm will be classified as smokers.
Significance
If shown to be safe and effective, transdermal nicotine will have a major impact on the
secondary prevention of recurrent cardiac events on the 20,000 Canadian smokers who suffer
an ACS each year.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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