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Clinical Trial Summary

E-cigarettes are an increasingly popular alternate nicotine delivery system, but nothing is known about the effects of electronic cigarettes on the lungs. We hypothesize that e-cigarettes disorder airway epithelial and alveolar macrophages biology. Our goal is not to carry out a large epidemiologic study of electronic cigarette users to study lung function and other possible abnormal clinical phenotypes, but rather to focus on whether electronic cigarette smoke disorders the biology of the lung cells first exposed to the electronic cigarette smoke, a parameter that is the precursor of abnormalities in lung function and which is far more sensitive than lung function.


Clinical Trial Description

The specific aim of this study is to assess the hypothesis that electronic smoking disorders the biology of the airway epithelium and alveolar macrophages, to evaluate these changes in the lungs of normal nonsmokers exposed to electronic cigarettes, and to directly determine if the inhaled smoke from electronic cigarettes disturbs the biology of the naïve lung that has not been exposed to tobacco products. Because nicotine can be addictive with continual use, we will limit the exposure to a maximum of a nicotine equivalent of 1/2 pack of cigarettes over a 5 day period, a level that has been used safely in studies of healthy nonsmokers' naïve to nicotine.

To obtain the most unbiased data about the effect of electronic cigarette use on the lung, normal nonsmokers will be briefly exposed to electronic cigarettes and lung cells, airway epithelium and alveolar macrophages, lung epithelial lining fluid (ELF) and serum will be collected before and after e-cigarette exposure. There will be 5 study groups consisting of 10 non-smoker subjects (A-E), with each group undergoing an increased exposure to the amount of e-cigarettes (Group a being the lowest exposure, group E being the highest). Six of the subjects in each group will be exposed to e-cigarettes with nicotine while the remaining four in each group being exposed to nicotine-free e-cigarettes. Subjects will be assigned to use electronic cigarettes that either do or do not contain nicotine in a randomized, blinded manner.

The duration of which the subjects will be observed for e-cigarette exposure will be 8 days. Baselines for each group will be established on Day 1 in which all subjects will undergo a bronchoscopy and an assessment of vital signs.

For subjects in group A, at the day 8 visit after the vital signs are assessed, 3 hours prior to bronchoscopy, the subject will be asked to inhale 10 puffs of a "Blu" brand e-cigarette (for the nicotine-containing e-cigarette, this is approximately equivalent to < 1 cigarette). At 2 hours prior to the bronchoscopy procedure, if the subject has no adverse effect to the e-cigarette he/she will again be asked to inhale 10 puffs of the "Blu" e-cigarette. The vital signs will again be confirmed and any symptoms assessed prior to proceeding with bronchoscopy. Subjects in group B will undergo an identical exposure, but on both days 7 and 8. Subjects in group C will undergo similar exposure on days 6-8, group D on days 5-8, and group E days 4-8 for a maximum of 5 exposure days prior to bronchoscopy. The research team will contact subjects at 1 month and 6 months after their Day 8 bronchoscopy in order to determine whether or not they have become dependent on nicotine. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02188511
Study type Interventional
Source Weill Medical College of Cornell University
Contact
Status Terminated
Phase N/A
Start date January 2014
Completion date July 2018

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