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Cigarette Smoking clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Cigarette Smoking.

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NCT ID: NCT06292130 Completed - Cigarette Smoking Clinical Trials

Health-Kit Enabled Mobile App for Tobacco Cessation

Start date: March 21, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Tobacco use remains the leading preventable cause of death in the US, contributing to more than 480,000 premature deaths each year. The Tobacco Treatment Guidelines underscore the need to offer patients who use tobacco products brief interventions that include prescriptions for proven pharmacological smoking cessation aids and proactive connections to evidence-based behavioral support. The rapid expansion of smart phone capabilities enhances the potential for tobacco cessation apps to personalize behavior change guidance and to send contextually relevant tailored behavior change nudges based on readiness to quit and electronic heath record (EHR) data. Rich data from EHRs are now available to third-party apps from the Health app (iOS) via Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources standard Application Programming Interface (API). This Phase I SBIR will explore the acceptability and effects of one such innovative health IT solution. Refresh is a highly individualized tobacco cessation HealthKit enabled app that will 1) implement a full range of best practices in tailored health behavior change communications based on readiness to change; 2) individualize behavior change guidance based on Health app data; and 3) concisely provide data and documentation of key actionable insights in the EHR on the patient's smoking status, app usage, and brief micro-message clinicians can deliver to reinforce and accelerate a patient's behavior change progress. This interoperability will provide value to both patients and clinicians; empower and support successful and lasting behavior change; and enable the implementation and evaluation of a best-in-class approach to tobacco and nicotine treatment. Extensive end user and stakeholder input will ensure refresh is designed for rapid dissemination. Patients of an integrated delivery system with an upcoming appointment (n=100) will be recruited to participate in a 30-day pilot test. Pilot participants will provide quantitative and qualitative data, and utilization and acceptability data will be examined. Pre-post comparisons of PROMIS measure for tobacco (psychosocial expectancies) will provide preliminary data on the effects of the program. Acceptability data from participating clinicians (n=10) who receive and deliver EHR prompts will also be gathered. The hypothesis is that the patients who utilize refresh will have significantly higher psychosocial expectancies regarding tobacco at follow-up. Secondary outcomes will be examined.

NCT ID: NCT06032793 Completed - Cigarette Smoking Clinical Trials

Effects of Deep Breathing Exercise on Pulmonary Function, Perceived Stress and Physical Fitness.

Start date: September 1, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Effects of deep breathing exercise on pulmonary function, perceived stress and physical fitness among healthy smokers.

NCT ID: NCT05958992 Completed - Cigarette Smoking Clinical Trials

Effects of e-Cigarettes on Perceptions and Behavior - Remote Substudy # 2

Start date: August 25, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study assess the ways in which e-cigarette product characteristics, such as flavors and nicotine salts, impact user experience to inform potential regulations.

NCT ID: NCT05958979 Completed - Cigarette Smoking Clinical Trials

Effects of e-Cigarettes on Perceptions and Behavior - Remote Substudy # 1

Start date: August 25, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study assess the ways in which e-cigarette product characteristics, such as marketing strategies, impact user experience to inform potential regulations.

NCT ID: NCT05958966 Completed - Cigarette Smoking Clinical Trials

Effects of e-Cigarettes on Perceptions and Behavior - Substudy 2

Start date: April 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This project will assess the ways in which e-cigarette product diversity impacts the user experience to inform potential regulations by identifying product characteristics that may: (1) put young adults at risk for tobacco product use; and (2) facilitate adult smokers switching to e-cigarettes. There are three primary objectives to the study: (1) Determine which dimensions of e-cigarette product diversity differentially affect product appeal in the overall population of tobacco product users as well as affect product appeal across young adult e-cigarette users and middle-age/older adult smokers; (2) Determine which dimensions of e-cigarette product diversity differentially affect product appeal in the overall population of tobacco product users as well as affect abuse liability in young adult e-cigarette users and the ability to resist smoking in adult smokers; (3) Determine the affect of product characteristics on e-cigarette nicotine delivery profile. For this substudy, adult smokers (N=200) will attend two laboratory session in which they will self-administer e-cigarette products varied according to within-subject e-cigarette factors (e.g., flavor, nicotine formulation) and smoke their own cigarettes.

NCT ID: NCT05788068 Completed - Smoking Cessation Clinical Trials

Efficacy and Neuroimaging Mechanisms of Smoking Cessation in China

Start date: March 1, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This proposed project is to assess the efficacy of CBT-based digital smoking cessation interventions in China, as well as explore its neuroimaging mechanisms.

NCT ID: NCT05740098 Completed - Cigarette Smoking Clinical Trials

Financial Incentives for Smoking Cessation Among Mothers

Start date: June 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Investigators will examine whether adding financial incentives and nicotine replacement dual therapy to current best practices for smoking cessation (i.e. referral to counseling using a telephone quit line) increases cessation rates in mothers and reduces second-hand smoke exposure in children. While perhaps more expensive upfront compared to best practices alone, the investigators hypothesize that this treatment approach will be a more cost-effective cessation intervention.

NCT ID: NCT05644002 Completed - Cigarette Smoking Clinical Trials

Puff Biofeedback to Reduce Smoking Reinforcement

Start date: March 21, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of the study is to examine the effects of a novel bio-behavioral paradigm, entitled, Puff Topography Biofeedback Training, compared to a control condition, in reducing stress-induced smoking reinforcement.

NCT ID: NCT05520775 Completed - Clinical trials for Alcohol Use Disorder

Semaglutide for Alcohol Use Disorder

Start date: September 2, 2022
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This is an early-Phase II human laboratory trial using a randomized, placebo-controlled, dose-ranging design to investigate the effects of semaglutide, a GLP-1 receptor agonist, on alcohol-related outcomes in adults with alcohol use disorder (AUD).

NCT ID: NCT05279053 Completed - Cigarette Smoking Clinical Trials

Mapping Brain Glutamate in Humans: Sex Differences in Cigarette Smokers

Start date: April 1, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The proposed study will evaluate sex differences in whole-brain glutamate (Glu), with a focus on the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC), anterior insula, and thalamus, as well as how it is influenced by sex (males vs. females), smoking state (overnight abstinent vs. sated), and circulating ovarian hormones (estrogen and progesterone) in women. Glu will be measured in almost the entire brain, with special focus on the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC), anterior insula, and thalamus, all of which have been implicated in behavioral states linked to tobacco withdrawal, using an echo-planar spectroscopic imaging (EPSI) variant of magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS). Serum ovarian hormones (estrogen and progesterone) will be measured for female participants to determine relationships between brain Glu and this hormone. Whole-brain Glu will be measured in 60 smokers (30 men, 30 women) twice, after overnight (~12 h) abstinence and after participants smoke the first cigarette of the day.