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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT00330187
Other study ID # DA17460
Secondary ID R01DA017460
Status Completed
Phase Phase 2
First received
Last updated
Start date March 2004
Est. completion date July 2009

Study information

Verified date September 2018
Source Medical University of South Carolina
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

In the current proposal, we intend to study the efficacy of bupropion SR with or without combined contingency management (CM) among adolescent cigarette smokers. The proposed study will test not only medication (bupropion SR), but also combination of medication and CM in potentially improving smoking cessation outcomes AND retention of adolescent smokers in the study.

Hypothesis to be tested: Bupropion SR treatment will increase abstinence from cigarette smoking (as measured by urine cotinine and continuous abstinence) in adolescent smokers as compared to treatment with placebo only.

Hypothesis to be tested: Adolescent smokers treated with combined bupropion SR + contingency management (CM) treatment will have increased retention and increased abstinence rates when compared to bupropion SR alone or CM + placebo treated groups (as measured by decreased drop-out of participants, urine cotinine and continuous abstinence).

Hypothesis to be tested: CM will increase the abstinence from cigarette smoking (as measured by urine cotinine and continuous abstinence) in adolescent smokers as compared to treatment with placebo only.


Description:

To test the hypotheses, 216 adolescent smokers will be recruited. Fifty-four adolescent smokers will be recruited in each of the four groups: bupropion SR only, bupropion SR + CM, CM + placebo, and placebo only. The cells will be balanced for gender and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder using permuted block randomization. A counseling intervention was added for all groups because it was reasoned that it would be unethical not to provide an active treatment to cigarette smoking adolescents. The counseling intervention will consist of two quit smoking brochures that provide information on tips to help quit smoking.

The study will consist of a one-week lead in period followed by a six-week treatment trial. For the medication groups, medications will be titrated during the one-week lead-in period. The primary outcome measure is urine cotinine and self-report of cigarette use collected using the Time-Line Follow-Back at the end of six weeks.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 134
Est. completion date July 2009
Est. primary completion date July 2009
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender All
Age group 12 Years to 21 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

1. Regular cigarette smokers smoking at least 5 cigarettes per day as derived by Time-Line Follow-Back method (Sobell et al., 1988). Average number of cigarettes per day (over past 30 days) will be used. Five cigarettes per day may seem low, but based on previous studies, adolescents tend to smoke fewer cigarettes per day as compared to adults.

2. Baseline urine cotinine level greater than 100 ng/ml.

3. Age range of 12 - 21

4. If under 18 yr. of age, parent(s) or guardian(s) able to participate in informed consent and initial assessment, or the participant must provide evidence of emancipated status.

5. For post menarchal female participants: agree to use birth control to avoid pregnancy.

Exclusion Criteria:

1. Active substance abuse/dependence (other than nicotine) within 2 weeks prior to participating in the study

2. Lifetime bipolar affective disorder (BPAD), psychosis, eating disorders. Bupropion may have adverse consequence on participants with these psychiatric diagnoses.

3. Current major depressive disorders. Since bupropion is also an antidepressant, this criteria is to minimize the confound of depressive disorder during the study. History of depressive disorders and current attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) will not be an exclusion. We will use permuted block randomization procedure to balance the groups for ADHD.

4. Pregnancy or lactation. The safety of bupropion in pregnancy and during lactation is not well studied.

5. History of seizure disorder or predisposition to seizures (e.g., history of significant head trauma, currently taking medications that lower seizure threshold), since bupropion can lower seizure threshold.

6. History of severe renal, hepatic, neurological, or chronic pulmonary disease. This criterion was chosen due to the hepatic metabolism of bupropion.

7. Unstable medical problems

8. Allergy to bupropion

9. Current treatment with any other medication containing bupropion

10. Current treatment with any monoamine oxidase (MAO) inhibitors currently or within 2 weeks of starting the study since there may be serious and severe medical interactions between MAO inhibitors and bupropion SR.

11. Current treatment with nicotine replacement therapy (NRT)

12. History of intolerance or non-response to bupropion SR.

13. Current (past month) suicide ideation

14. Suicide attempt (past year)

Study Design


Intervention

Drug:
Bupropion SR
Bupropion SR, with goal dose 300 mg/day, for 6 weeks of active treatment
Behavioral:
Contingency Management
Contingency Management provided at twice-weekly visits during the 6-week active treatment. Escalating schedule, with resets, reinforcing smoking abstinence.
Other:
Placebo
Placebo, matched in appearance to Bupropion SR, for 6 weeks of treatment

Locations

Country Name City State
United States Medical University of South Carolina Charleston South Carolina

Sponsors (2)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Medical University of South Carolina National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Biologically-verified 7-day Point Prevalence Smoking Abstinence Self-reported abstinence for the past 7 days, confirmed by urine cotinine =100 ng/mL End of treatment (week 6)
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