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Cigarette Smoking clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04179617 Withdrawn - Smoking Clinical Trials

Impact of New Product Standards for JUUL Among Dual JUUL/Combusted Cigarette Users

Start date: October 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

To date the majority of experimental tobacco regulatory science has focused specifically on the impact of possible tobacco product standards (e.g. limiting e-cigarette flavor) on the use of the single tobacco product targeted by the standard (e.g. e-cigarettes) among individuals who primarily or solely use the targeted product (e.g. vapers). Whereas this "single target" approach has yielded a large amount of actionable evidence, it has also resulted in a significant gap in the regulatory science evidence base for two reasons: First, the focus on single tobacco product users has resulted in very little evidence regarding the impact of possible new product standards among multiple tobacco product (MTP) users. MTP users make up a sizeable proportion (30-40%) of the tobacco using population and individuals who use e-cigarettes (EC) and combusted cigarettes (CC) comprise the largest MTP using group (40% of MTP users). A lack of data on this population means that estimates of the impact of new product standards on public health are incomplete. Despite some data derived from hypothetical tasks, little experimental research exists to evaluate how potential tobacco regulations might impact the use of other tobacco products in addition to the targeted product. It is critical to anticipate how potential restrictions on the EC market may impact EC and other tobacco product-such as CC-use. In the proposed research, we will recruit young adult (age 21-29) dual EC/CC users evaluate the demand for participants' usual brand CC as compared to EC that vary in nicotine content (e.g., 5% vs. 3% pods). Participants will engage in a validated concurrent choice task in which they will work for fixed doses of EC vapor or CC smoke in exchange for expended effort. In addition, we will seek to answer this question in samples of dual EC and CC users-individuals who, because they regularly use both EC and CC, are most vulnerable to changes in the appeal of EC and CC brought about by a product standard limiting EC flavors.

NCT ID: NCT03148652 Withdrawn - Cigarette Smoking Clinical Trials

Cognitive and Emotional Skills to Aid Smoking Cessation

Start date: October 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Cigarette smoking is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in the United States. Among individuals who engage in smoking cessation treatment, attrition rates remain high. Many smokers experience difficulties in regulating their emotions, which reduces their ability to benefit from standard interventions and leads to increased smoking behaviors. In addition, cognitive deficits (e.g., reduced working memory capacity) may prevent smokers from applying information from interventions, making smart choices about the benefits and risks of smoking, and resisting smoking advertisements. This study will test whether adding a working memory training and motivational enhancement component to a standard, evidence-based cognitive behavioral therapy-based smoking cessation program (SCP) can improve treatment adherence and successful quit rates. This study will compare 5 sessions of SCP with an additional wellness-focused component (control intervention) to SCP incorporating motivational enhancement and working memory training ("enhanced" intervention). Participants will be adult smokers recruited from the greater Boston community who are interested in quitting smoking. This study will determine the efficacy, acceptability, and feasibility of the enhanced intervention.

NCT ID: NCT02488889 Withdrawn - Cigarette Smoking Clinical Trials

Effects of Varenicline in Heavy Drinking Smokers

VAR
Start date: August 2015
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

This laboratory study will examine if varenicline can reduce alcohol-induced smoking lapse in heavy drinking smokers.

NCT ID: NCT02195570 Withdrawn - Cigarette Smoking Clinical Trials

Contingency Management for Smoking Cessation in Pregnant Minority Women

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

The long-term goal of this research is to reduce tobacco-related disparities in maternal and infant health outcomes by improving smoking cessation and relapse prevention interventions for minority pregnant and postpartum women, who have been significantly underrepresented in smoking cessation research. This study will examine the feasibility and efficacy of a prize-based contingency management approach for increasing smoking cessation and preventing relapse among socioeconomically disadvantaged minority pregnant smokers. First, the intervention will be pretested with 10 pregnant low-income minority smokers and then refined based on acceptability survey and focus group data. Next, a pilot study will be conducted. 60 highly disadvantaged minority women, recruited from the outpatient obstetric clinics at a large teaching hospital, who report daily smoking and who meet other eligibility criteria will be enrolled and randomized to one of two study conditions: 1) Standard Psychoeducational Intervention (6-week, individually-administered, pregnancy-specific Quit Smoking Now curriculum, as currently implemented in the clinic; QSN Only); 2) Standard Psychoeducational Intervention plus Contingency Management (provision of incentives contingent on biochemically-verified abstinence; QSN-CM). Abstinence monitoring via expired carbon monoxide and salivary cotinine levels will occur in both groups beginning on the first quit day and continuing through 3-months postpartum. Only participants in the QSN-CM group will be reinforced for biochemically-verified abstinence with chances to win prizes ranging in value from approximately $1 to $100 ('fishbowl' or 'prize bowl' method). Study outcomes will be assessed through follow-up research exams (delivery and 6-months postpartum) and hospital chart reviews. The primary hypothesis is that that women randomized to the QSN-CM condition will have higher rates of abstinence during pregnancy and postpartum compared to women receiving standard of care alone. Results should advance scientific knowledge regarding effective methods for promoting and maintaining smoking abstinence among pregnant disadvantaged women and provide preliminary feasibility and efficacy data needed to support a larger randomized controlled trial.

NCT ID: NCT01907594 Withdrawn - Cigarette Smoking Clinical Trials

Effects of Nicotine Replacement Therapy and D-cycloserine on Nicotine Treatment Seekers

Start date: August 2013
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The investigators previously developed a cigarette cue extinction treatment (CET) procedure in non-treatment seeking volunteer smokers in our nicotine laboratory. The goal of Cue Extinction Treatment is to un-pair a behavioral or autonomic response from the stimulus that triggers it. This is accomplished through repeated exposure to that trigger, while removing the patient's ability to act out the conditioned response. In the present study, the trigger is a lit cigarette, and the response the investigators seek to un-pair is cigarette craving. In the procedure the investigators have previously developed and intend to use again, the participant is shown a pack of his brand of choice cigarettes. The researcher removes a cigarette from the pack, lights it, and asks the participant to hold the cigarette without smoking it for 90 seconds. This procedure is repeated seven times over the course of a six-hour lab session. The investigators hope to boost the clinical response to smoking cue exposure therapy in quitters on NRT (nicotine replacement therapy) pretreatment by pharmacological augmentation with the partial NMDA receptor agonist D-cycloserine (DCS). Behavioral extinction training is a form of learning that may be modulated by NMDA receptor mediated glutamate transmission. The study's main hypothesis is that the partial NMDA receptor agonist D-cycloserine (DCS) facilitates cue exposure training and may prevent relapse to smoking. The aim of the proposed study is to assess whether DCS-facilitation of cue-exposure therapy improves abstinence among smokers on the nicotine patch seeking treatment. Development of an effective treatment strategy to enhance the effectiveness of NRTs would have a direct and significant positive impact on public health.