View clinical trials related to Tobacco Use Disorder.
Filter by:Despite the establishment of various smoking cessation methods, including pharmacological intervention, only a small proportion of smokers who visit doctors choose to receive such assistance. Such under-utilization is especially apparent in some cultures, as in the case of Korea, where a government survey showed that only 0.5% of current or formal smoker reported they had been prescribed smoking cessation medication. Shame in asking for help for an addictive disorder has been recognized as one of the most recognized cultural barrier in Asian-American population. It is clear that culturally focused studies on smoking cessation is warranted. Patient decision aids are tools that help people become involved in decision making by providing information about the options and outcomes and by clarifying personal values. Patient decision aids have been developed to help patients decide whether to quit smoking or not, or whether to use smoking medication or not. However, such previous studies have only been focused on western populations. The main purpose of this study is to develop a culturally appropriate decision aid for smoking cessation for the Korean population, as well as evaluate its effect on their decision to use smoking cessation medication. The investigators expect that culturally tailored smoking cessation decision aids would increase knowledge about efficacy of smoking cessation, make people have more positive attitudes toward smoking cessation medication, encourage people to discuss about smoking cessation medication with their physicians. Ultimately the investigators expect it would increase usage of smoking cessation medication and enhance the quitting rate of smoking, which is a very important clinical issue.
Background: - Stressful situations often cause tobacco cravings. These cravings can make it very difficult for smokers who are trying to quit. Research has shown that craving may involve hormone pathways in the brain. The anti-anxiety drug pexacerfont acts on these hormone pathways. Researchers want to see if pexacerfont can act on the brain and lessen stress-related tobacco cravings in smokers who are trying to quit. Objectives: - To test the effects of pexacerfont on tobacco craving in smokers who want to quit smoking. Eligibility: - Smokers between 18 to 55 years of age who are trying to quit. (Participants must have smoked at least 10 cigarettes per day for at least 1 year.) Design: - Participants will be screened with a physical exam and medical history. - Participants will be assigned to take either pexacerfont or a placebo. They will take three pills every morning for the first 7 days, then one pill every morning for 23 days. - At the first visit, participants will provide blood and urine samples. They will then be asked to prepare a 5-minute speech and give it to the study researchers. They will also be asked to do mental math problems for another 5 minutes. During these tests, blood pressure, heart rate, sweating, and skin temperature will be measured. Participants will fill out questionnaires about stress levels, tobacco cravings, and personal experiences. - Participants will take the study pills for 30 days. Before the 2-week point, participants will be asked to try to quit smoking for 2 weeks. - Participants will have four study visits. These visits will involve brain imaging scans and emotional stress tests. Tobacco cravings and other stress levels will be measured at each study. Blood and urine samples may be collected at these studies. - Participants will have follow-up visits and phone calls for up to 6 months after the end of the study visits.
The low overall effectiveness of available smoking cessation treatment so far, indicate the need for new and more efficacious ways to help smokers maintain abstinence. Smokers are a highly heterogeneous population. Identification of individual characteristics that predict success in smoking cessation is highly desirable to allow designing more specific strategies in order to enhance success in quitting tobacco.The main objective of this study is to assess whether the presence of certain neuropsychological deficits found before the initiation of smoking cessation is associated with a greater relapse rate.The secondary objectives concern how neuropsychological performance are involved in motivation and craving in the whole sample of smokers or in subsample. Long-term perspective is to define clinical or neuropsychological factors associated with agood or poor prognosis for success and provived more specific and therefore more effective care.
The overall purpose of this research is two-fold. First, the two smoking cessation medication treatments with the strongest evidence of effectiveness have never been directly compared. This research will determine how these two treatments compare in effectiveness in a head-to-head trial, and which types of smokers benefit most from each. Second, much of the data on smoking and health come from studies from many years ago. Today's smokers differ from earlier smokers in many ways that could influence the impact of smoking on health (e.g., weight, sex, diet, socio-economic status); the proposed work will determine how smoking cessation affects cardiovascular and pulmonary health in today's smokers.
The investigators propose to use obstetric-gynecological clinics to conduct a randomized clinical trial that would compare two SBIRTS (Screening, Brief Intervention, Referral and Treatment), delivered either by a trained nurse or by computer, to usual care (a control condition). As part of this trial, the investigators will include outcomes that allow us to assess the cost effectiveness of these three conditions.
RATIONALE: Memantine hydrochloride may help people stop smoking by decreasing the symptoms of nicotine withdrawal. PURPOSE: This randomized, pilot phase II trial studies how effective memantine hydrochloride works compared to placebo in helping cancer survivors stop smoking.
Breast cancer patients who smoke, are at greater risk for treatment complications. The purpose of this study is to see if the researchers can find ways to help patients who have breast cancer quit smoking. They will compare two ways to help people quit smoking. Some patients will receive varenicline, a prescription medicine also known as Chantix,®. Other patients will receive a placebo drug. A placebo is an inactive substance that contains no medicine. All patients will receive smoking cessation counseling provided by our tobacco treatment specialists. They hope that what the researchers learn from this study will help us improve our smoking cessation treatment program for breast cancer patients.
Using the NIH-funded Way to Health platform, the investigators will conduct this smoking cessation randomized controlled trial (RCT) among CVS employees. The investigators will be able to determine the comparative and absolute efficacy and effectiveness of 4 different incentive structures that are each grounded in behavioral economic principles. Additionally, the investigators will measure rates of and reasons for acceptance of each incentive structure, and examine participant characteristics that modify the efficacy and acceptance of different incentive structures.
Varenicline is the best smoking cessation agent to date; however it is only effective in a subgroup of smokers and is associated with undesirable side effects in other subgroups. To understand the underlying pharmaco-heterogeneity, the proposed project will use perfusion functional magnetic resonance imaging and a functional candidate gene association approach using brain, behavioral, and clinical endpoints in a placebo-controlled study of chronic varenicline administration in smokers. Brain and behavioral responses to smoking cues will be will be significantly greater in 9/10-repeats compared to 10/10-repeats. DAT 9/10-repeat smokers receiving varenicline will have better treatment outcome compared to 10/10-repeats. For the purposes of the clinical trial portion of the study, the change from cigarettes per day at Baseline to the last day of treatment will be reported.
The purpose of this study is to determine the timeframe (relative to a stress task) that is most effective at attenuating the increase in symptoms of tobacco craving and withdrawal that occur when smokers are presented with stressful situations.