Nicotine Dependence Clinical Trial
Official title:
Pilot Study of Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) in Nicotine Addiction
Background:
- Treatment for nicotine addiction is characterized by high rates of relapse. New
treatment therapies for nicotine addiction are exploring the use of brain scanning
equipment to control and decrease nicotine and cigarette cravings.
- Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) uses magnetic pulses to stimulate the brain.
These pulses can change activity in parts of the brain. Researchers are interested in
determining whether TMS delivered in single pulses can decrease activity in the parts of
the brain that respond to nicotine craving.
Objectives:
- To determine whether single pulse TMS can reduce cue-induced nicotine craving and use in
cigarette smokers.
Eligibility:
- Individuals 18 years of age and older who are physically healthy and have smoked 10 or
more cigarettes per day for at least 1 year.
- A small group of healthy nonsmoking control subjects 18 years of age and older will also
participate in the study.
Design:
- The study will involve seven study visits and two follow-up visits. The control
participants will have only two visits: one with a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan
and one with TMS to evaluate brain function and response.
- Participants will have an initial assessment about tobacco use habits and craving
patterns, and will provide blood and urine samples before beginning the study.
- Participants will have two initial MRI brain scans. The first scan will look at the
structure of the brain at rest. During the other scan, participants will look at images
related to and not related to cigarette smoking.
- The single pulse TMS sessions (with either actual TMS or inactive [sham] TMS) will be
held daily for 5 consecutive days. Magnetic pulses will be triggered by
cigarette-related picture cues and delivered at varying intervals before the participant
sees a cigarette-related picture. During these testing visits, researchers will ask
questions related to tobacco use and craving, and collect urine and breath samples for
further study.
- Participants will have two follow-up visits, 1 week and 2 weeks after the TMS sessions,
to evaluate memory and mood, and will have one final MRI brain scan at the end of the
study.
Primary objective: Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) provides a non-invasive means of
inhibiting brain neural activity. This pilot study will test whether 5 days of single pulse
(sp) TMS reduces cue-induced nicotine craving and use in cigarette smokers.
Hypothesis: We predict that active spTMS will significantly lower craving for nicotine
compared with sham spTMS.
Study population: Subjects will be up to 73 adult cigarette smokers (averaging greater than
or equal to 10 cigarettes daily for greater than or equal to one year) with current nicotine
dependence (based on DSM-IV criteria or Faerstrom Test for Nicotine Dependence score greater
than or equal to 3). Subjects will not have other current major psychiatric disorders or
substance abuse. Subjects in the pilot phase (one fMRI and one TMS session to valid brain
mapping procedures) will be up to 25 healthy non-smokers.
Design: Following a baseline day to evaluate subject characteristics, subjects will be
randomly assigned to receive 5 days of active or sham spTMS session. spTMS at strength 120
percent of the motor threshold will be applied to the prefrontal cortex (PFC) using a
figure-eight coil. Magnetic pulses will be triggered by cigarette-related pictorial cues and
delivered at varying intervals prior to presentation of a cigarette-related picture. TMS
pulses will not be delivered during emotionally salient images unrelated to nicotine or
emotionally neutral images. Brain site localization will use a computerized navigation system
based on functional and structural MRI scans obtained before the first session. Each session
(lasting around 20 minutes) will consist of 108 trials (cue presentations): 72 with
nicotine-associated cues and 18 each with non-drug-associated positive or neutral cues.
Subjects return for follow-up fMRI and behavioral assessments one and two weeks after the
final TMS session.
Outcome measures: The primary outcome measure will be nicotine craving assessed with the
Tobacco Craving Questionnaire and visual analog scales before and after every TMS session and
at one- and two-week follow-up. Secondary outcome measures will include cigarette smoking
over the test period and at follow-up assessed by self-report, salivary cotinine levels, and
expired breath CO levels. A follow-up fMRI will evaluate changes in regional brain activity
associated with changes in craving and TMS treatments.
Benefits: Participants will not directly benefit from this study. This study may contribute
to better scientific understanding of nicotine addiction and development of better treatment
methods.
Risks: The primary risks from TMS are transient headache, scalp discomfort, and hearing loss
(minimized by wearing ear plugs). Seizures are very rare when spTMS is administered within
accepted safety guidelines and individuals at increased risk of seizures are excluded. By
excluding individuals with a history of non-drug-induced mania/ hypomania we minimize the
risk of inducing a manic episode.
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