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Clinical Trial Summary

Cigarette smoking constitutes the greatest preventable cause of mortality and morbidity in the US. The most critical period for long term success of smoking cessation appears to be in the first 7 days after the quit date. A metaanalysis of 3 pharmacotherapy trials revealed that abstinence during the first 7 days was the strongest predictor of 6 month outcomes (n=1649; Odds ratio: 1.4, P <0.0001; Ashare et al. 2013). Prodigious relapse rates during this first week of smoking cessation are likely due to behavioral and neurobiological factors that contribute to high cue-associated craving and low executive control over smoking. The long term goal of the research is to develop evidence-based transcranial magnetic stimulation protocols to facilitate abstinence during this critical period.


Clinical Trial Description

The investigators will evaluate the efficacy of TMS to the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) to change smoking-related behaviors. The investigators long-term vision is that TBS would be used as an acute intervention enabling individuals to get through the first week after a smoking quit attempt without relapsing, and transition to more sustainable mechanisms of behavioral change (e.g., medication, cognitive behavioral therapy). Aim 1 (Strategy 1): Modulating the limbic system as an approach to treatment: vmPFC TBS. Cigarette smokers will be randomized to receive 10 days of real TBS or sham TBS directed to the vmPFC. Intermittently the desire to smoke, and cigarette self-administration will be assessed. The investigators hypothesize that TBS will: 1) decrease the behavioral smoking measures described above, which will be sustained over a time period sufficient to overcome the initial quit attempt (~7-14 days). The outcomes of the present aims will resolve a critical gap in the investigator's knowledge regarding the efficacy of a promising TMS treatment strategies. These outcomes will be directly translated to a larger longitudinal study evaluating a multi-pronged approach to improving outcomes in traditional pharmacotherapy or behavioral treatments. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04159571
Study type Interventional
Source Wake Forest University Health Sciences
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date August 20, 2020
Completion date November 23, 2022

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