View clinical trials related to Nicotine Addiction.
Filter by:The purpose of the present study is to examine the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of "tobacco-free" oral nicotine pouches, at various doses and flavors, in healthy adult smokers. The study will utilize a within-subjects, double-blind design. Upon enrollment, participants will complete 7 dosing conditions: tobacco-flavored pouch (low or high nicotine dose), mint/menthol-flavored pouch (low or high nicotine dose), and fruit-flavored pouch (low or high nicotine dose); participants will also complete a condition where the participants will smoke participants' preferred brand of cigarettes. In each experimental session, participants will complete 2 product-use bouts. In bout 1, the participants will use a single product (pouch or cigarette) for a fixed period under controlled conditions. In bout 2, participants will be given 2 hours to use participants' assigned product ad libitum.
Patients with schizophrenia spectrum disorder (SSD) will be exposed to active repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) from F8 coil or active rTMS from H coil for smoking cessation. Smoking and brain functional connectivity changes will be assessed at baseline, different stages of rTMS and/or follow-ups.
The overarching aim of this proposed randomized controlled trial (RCT) is to test nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) with text message support for two smoking cessation approaches among young adult dual users of combustible cigarettes (CC) and electronic cigarettes (EC). The investigators will use a 2x2 factorial design to randomize 390 participants to receive A) NRT plus text messages to quit CCs only, B) NRT plus text messages to quit CCs and ECs simultaneously, C) text messages alone to quit CCs only, or D) text messages alone to quit CCs and ECs simultaneously. The investigators primary outcome will be 7-day point-prevalence abstinence at the end of treatment (i.e., 3 months after randomization). The investigators will recruit participants using national advertising strategies. All treatment will be provided remotely in order to increase treatment access and comply with current COVID-19 restrictions.
To examine reward processing and cognitive control both with and without the influence of vaporized nicotine in young adults with no history of cigarette use using EEG and fMRI. The goal is to determine whether acute nicotine administration using a Juul device would impact functional correlates of reward and inhibitory control in people who commonly use juul devices.
This is a research study to understand and determine the effectiveness of electronic cigarettes versus nicotine replacement therapy in adults who smoke and also live with HIV/AIDS in effort to reduce cigarette smoking.
A pragmatic, single blinded, randomized, controlled non-inferiority trial of Cytisine versus Nicotine Replacement Therapy for continuous abstinence is conducted in the government run primary health hospitals in Mongolia.
This study is comparing the efficacy of two smoking cessation apps.
In a double-blinded, randomized, parallel controlled design, patients with schizophrenia spectrum disorder will be exposed to active or sham repetitive transcranial magentic stimulation (TMS) which was guided by functional magnetic resonance image (MRI). Smoking reduction/cessation and brain functional connectivity changes will be assessed at baseline, different stages of rTMS and/or follow-ups.
Quitting smoking has important health benefits for people with serious mental illness, more than half of whom are smokers. Smoking reductions in this population, in turn, could contribute to saving billions of dollars in healthcare expenditures. Finding ways to deliver more effective and wider reaching smoking cessation interventions to individuals with serious mental illness is a pressing priority. Smartphone apps are a wide reaching technology that could provide a viable platform to deliver smoking cessation interventions for individuals with serious mental illness. However, do smoking cessation apps need to be tailored for people with serious mental illness to ensure their success? Or can providers simply use standard and freely available smoking cessation mobile health treatments designed for the general population? Furthermore, is it feasible to conduct mHealth trials in this population? Therefore, this trial will test whether (1) a tailored smoking cessation app for people with serious mental illness results in higher levels of engagement with smoking cessation content as compared to an app designed for the general population and (2) smoking cessation mHealth trials can be feasibly conducted in this population.
Three hundred-twenty (320) adult smokers of menthol or non-menthol combustible cigarettes will be recruited and randomly assigned to one of five groups (n=64/group), who will be asked to switch for 12 weeks to ad libitum use of combustible cigarettes (matched to subjects' menthol preference) containing either 0.4, 1.4, 2.5, 5.6 or 16.9 mg nicotine (standardized nicotine yields ranging from 0.02-0.80 mg/cigarette), respectively. Each group will include 32 heavy (≥ 20 cigarettes/day), and 32 light smokers (≤10 cigarettes/day), who are hypothesized to be more sensitive to nicotine's reinforcing effects. Participants will also have free access to nicotine-containing e-cigarettes (JUUL) throughout the 12-week period. Abuse liability of combustible cigarettes will be assessed by behavioral (cigarettes/day, time to first cigarettes), self-report (rewarding effects, withdrawal symptoms) and biochemical indices (expired air carbon monoxide, cotinine blood sampling). In laboratory sessions, we will measure nicotine thresholds for detecting and recognizing the addictive, rewarding effects of smoking. This study is designed to help the FDA identify a target nicotine threshold that will not attract young people to smoking or induce relapse in former smokers. Additionally, we will determine the level of cigarette nicotine reduction that will be tolerated without inducing dissatisfaction in smokers, information that is relevant to the FDA for designing a stepwise nicotine reduction policy that can be implemented without widespread objections. The knowledge gained from this project will greatly increase our knowledge of nicotine addiction and will help frame an FDA policy relating to the regulation of the nicotine content of tobacco. Ultimately, a well-designed nicotine reduction policy has the potential to greatly reduce the enormous toll of death and disease caused by cigarette smoking.