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Tobacco Smoking clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04396847 Terminated - Clinical trials for Alcohol Use Disorder

Laboratory Screening of Lorcaserin for Alcohol Use Disorder

Start date: October 25, 2019
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Heavy-drinking smokers, including those with alcohol use disorder (AUD), are at increased risk for numerous negative health outcomes relative to those who use alcohol or cigarettes only. Although heavy-drinking smokers are recognized as an important subgroup for clinical and public health interventions, there are presently no approved medications for the joint indication of alcohol reduction and smoking cessation. Based on evidence that the serotonin system plays a role in alcohol and nicotine consumption and relapse, this study aims to examine whether a serotonin medication alters alcohol and nicotine responses in smokers with AUD, informing its potential utility as a candidate therapy for this clinical subgroup.

NCT ID: NCT03213418 Terminated - Smoking Cessation Clinical Trials

Electroretinogram: a New Human Biomarker for Smoking Cessation Treatment

Start date: February 1, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This project aims to develop electroretinogram as a new putative marker for dopamine release, and as a predictor of treatment response among patients seeking treatment for smoking cessation. Tobacco smoking continues to be a major public health challenge. Dopamine is a neurotransmitter released in the brain. Several lines of evidence suggest that dopamine release deficit in the brain is involved in the development and maintenance of nicotine dependence. The investigators hypothesize that smokers who do not have a deficit in dopamine release will more readily respond to behavioral treatment for smoking cessation, and in particular, financial incentives contingent on abstinence (Contingency Management). Previous pilot data suggest electroretinogram (ERG), which records electrical signals from the retina in response to light, is a clinically accessible correlate to dopamine release in the brain. The project proposes an ERG-based biomarker, and a pilot clinical trial to apply this biomarker to personalize smoking cessation treatment. This clinically tractable biomarker of central dopamine release may have a large number of future applications in the diagnosis and treatment of other mental illnesses and substance use disorders. The study will recruit normal controls and smokers, measure ERG before and after a standard dose of oral immediate release methylphenidate. Smokers will undergo a 12-week standardized treatment course of CM. The investigators will test whether smoking status and the response to CM are correlated to changes in ERG in response to methylphenidate challenge.