Smoking Clinical Trial
Official title:
An fMRI-study on the Effects of 3'-Aminomethylnicotine-P. Aeruginosa r-Exoprotein a Conjugate Vaccine (NicVAX®) and Placebo on Central Nervous System Activation and Behaviour Following a Nicotine Challenge
In this study the effects of a nicotine challenge on brain activity, behavior and mood will be evaluated in two groups of healthy volunteers who have a smoking habbit: The first group will undergo a series of treatments with NicVax, aimed at producing nicotine antibodies in the body and preventing nicotine to enter the brain. The second group will receive a placebo treatment. This pre-treatment (vaccination) will take place over a 18-week period. All participants will then undergo two days of testing. On each day the subjects will perform a number of psychomotor and memory tests after a challenge with nicotine (gum) or placebo(gum). Also brain activity will be studied in an fMRI scanner. We expect to see an effect on brain activation and performance only in the placebo-vaccinated group. The Nicvax vaccinated group should show activation and performance comparable to that after challenge with placebo(gum) as in this group nicotine should not cross the blood brain barrier and enter the brain
Rationale: To develop a more effective treatment for nicotine addiction is a public health
priority. In order to do so a better understanding is needed of the mechanisms 1) underlying
nicotine addiction and 2) the way treatments alter the way nicotine transiently and
permanently alters multiple cognitive and executive functions. Most effects of nicotine on
the Central Nervous System (CNS) are directly mediated by nicotine molecules. Treatment with
3'aminomethylnicotine P. aeruginosa r-Exoprotein A Conjugate Vaccine (NicVAX™) stimulates
the production of nicotine specific antibodies. These antibodies bind the small nicotine
molecules, preventing them to cross the Blood Brain Barrier (BBB) and thus preventing CNS
stimulation. A nicotine challenge given after vaccination will show no or diminished direct
effects of nicotine on CNS stimulation. The blocking effects of the nicotine specific
antibodies will be evaluated on several cognitive tasks and on reactivity to smoking-related
cues.
Objective: Main aim; to show that NicVAX attenuates nicotine induced CNS effects on brain
activation and cognitive performance relative to placebo. The secondary aim is to evaluate
how these changes in CNS stimulation alter subjective measures and the addictive properties
of nicotine.
Study design: within-subject cross-over double-blind placebo controlled study. Study
population: 48 current smokers, male, age 25-40, at least smoking 10 cigarettes /day the
last year, in general good health. Additional criteria; 1) No contra-indications for MRI 2)
No history of cognitive deficits or brain trauma 3) No use of psychoactive medication 4) No
contra-indications for nicotine gum.
Intervention (if applicable): The group will be randomized in two sub-populations. 1) 28
volunteers will receive five injections of 3'aminomethylnicotine P. aeruginosa r-Exoprotein
A Conjugate Vaccine (NicVAX™), 2) 20 smokers will receive five injections placebo. On test
days both groups will be given a nicotine challenge; a chewing gum either containing
nicotine (2mg) or a placebo.
Main study parameters/endpoints: correlation between nicotine specific antibody and 1) the
BOLD response during resting state, during the smoking-cue reactivity paradigm and during
task performance; in regions of interest associated with the specific tasks; 2) the number
of correct response and the reaction time; 3) correlation between nicotine specific antibody
and subjective signs of nicotine addiction, measured with several questionnaires.
Nature and extent of the burden and risks associated with participation, benefit and group
relatedness: participants will complete a medical screening questionnaire (15-30 min) and
will undergo a medical screening (45 min; 2 blood samples, a urine sample and an
electrocardiogram). Informed consent will be obtained. All participants will be vaccinated
with NicVAX or Placebo 5 times on day 0, 28, 56, 84 and 112 (4 weeks in between each
injection) During the training session (Day 0; ±1,5 hour) the inclusion/exclusion criteria
and baseline laboratory results will be reviewed to ensure that no changes to the
participants health and eligibility status occurred since the Screening Visit. Participants
will be randomized and receive either one dose NicVAX 400µ in 1 ml or a placebo
intramuscular. The cognitive fMRI task will be trained in a dummy scanner, and
questionnaires will be completed. Subsequent vaccinations (days 28, 56, 84 and 112) should
be given in the alternating deltoid muscle. Participants will be observed for 60 minutes to
monitor possible adverse events. Adverse events, vital signs and concomitant medications
will be recorded. During each test session (days 133, 140) participants will complete 5
questionnaires (30 minute total) and will perform several cognitive tasks inside the fMRI
scanner (scan session in total ~85 min). The last test session (day 140) three blood samples
(5-8 ml each) will be taken for nicotine-specific antibody assessment and to monitor
changes. In total the study will take 18 hours to complete. The participants will be paid 10
euro/hr as compensation. The risk of vaccination, fMRI scanning and of administration of
nicotine 2mg gum (delivering a dose of approximately 1-1.5 mg nicotine to the bloodstream)
is negligible for carefully screened participants. The nicotine specific-antibody vaccine
has been clinically tested on several occasions; the safety profile was favourable. Local
reactogenicity was generally mild to moderate and subsided spontaneously. Vaccinated
subjects with the highest antibody levels (top 30%) smoked less cigarettes per day and
reported a higher abstinence rate than placebo subjects, establishing proof-of-concept. The
group receiving the vaccine could therefore in theory reduce smoking/exposure to tobacco
smoke and have consequential health benefits.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Pharmacodynamics Study, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)
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