Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of this study is to better characterize differences in mood, attention, brain activation patterns underlying the beneficial effects of pharmacological treatments previously demonstrated to be help individuals successfully quit tobacco smoking. Smokers will be randomly assigned to one of three treatments: 1) bupropion sustained release (SR), 2) nicotine patch, or 3) placebo patches plus pills across a 45-day period with a 3-week intensive post-treatment follow-up. In addition, 20 percent of the subjects will be randomized to a delayed-quit control group.


Clinical Trial Description

The first aim of this revised proposal is to accurately assess the duration and trajectories of smoking abstinence symptoms and associated biobehavioral indices across 66 days of quitting smoking in 3 different treatment groups: 1) bupropion SR (BUP), 2) transdermal nicotine patch (TNP), and 3) placebo patch plus placebo pill. Study sensitivity and accuracy will be maximized by using procedures designed to maximize abstinence and minimize study dropout. The second aim is to characterize brain and psychological mechanisms by which BUP and TNP promote abstinence. While the efficacies of BUP and TNP in promoting smoking abstinence have been repeatedly demonstrated, little is known about the mechanisms mediating this efficacy. The final primary goal of this competitive continuation proposal is to characterize individual differences in psychological and brain mechanisms mediating the beneficial effects of BUP and TNP on smoking abstinence and withdrawal symptoms. A secondary goal is to assess the ability of a battery of innovative brain and biobehavioral measures of attention and affect to predict relapse.

To achieve these goals, the effects of quitting smoking with or without the help of TNP and BUP will be assessed intensively across 66 days of abstinence. Dependent measures will be mood, vigilance, attentional bias to smoking and emotional stimuli, and related physiological measures (resting EEG activation and activation asymmetry indices of affective states and traits, and event-related potential activity elicited by emotional and smoking stimuli). Smokers will be randomly assigned to one of three immediate-quit groups (N = 60 per group): (1) bupropion + placebo patch, (2) placebo pill + nicotine patch, and (3) placebo patch + placebo pill; or to a fourth (control) group (N = 40) that will quit after the final experimental session (after the other subjects have completed their 66-day* abstinence period). Subjects in the 3 treatment groups and the control group will have the same set of biobehavioral measures assessed during the experimental sessions at the same points in time. It is hypothesized that BUP and TNP will have both common and unique mechanisms by which they reduce withdrawal symptoms and that gender and personality traits will moderate the effects of these treatments. (Note.* To avoid final-session mood and arousal effects subjects will actually quit for 67 days, but biobehavioral measures will be collected on the 66th day of abstinence.) ;


Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Pharmacodynamics Study, Intervention Model: Factorial Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Basic Science


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT01048944
Study type Interventional
Source Southern Illinois University Carbondale
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Phase 4
Start date June 2005
Completion date January 2013

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT05176418 - IV Pulsed-Nicotine as a Model of Smoking: The Effects of Dose and Delivery Rate Early Phase 1
Completed NCT04084210 - Impact of Alternative Nicotine-Delivery Products on Combustible Cigarette Use Phase 2
Completed NCT04043728 - Addressing Psychological Risk Factors Underlying Smoking Persistence in COPD Patients: The Fresh Start Study N/A
Withdrawn NCT03707600 - State and Trait Mediated Response to TMS in Substance Use Disorder N/A
Recruiting NCT03999099 - Targeting Orexin to Treat Nicotine Dependence Phase 1
Completed NCT03847155 - Prevention of Nicotine Abstinence in Critically Ill Patients After Major Surgery N/A
Completed NCT02840435 - Study on Sit to Quit Phone Intervention N/A
Completed NCT02139930 - Project 2: Strategies for Reducing Nicotine Content in Cigarettes N/A
Completed NCT01982110 - A Mindfulness Based Application for Smoking Cessation N/A
Completed NCT01926626 - Evaluation of Moclobemide, a Reversible MAO-A Inhibitor, as an Adjunct to Nicotine Replacement Therapy in Female Smokers Phase 2
Completed NCT01632189 - The Effect of Varenicline on D2/D3 Receptor Binding in Smokers N/A
Completed NCT01569490 - Striving to Quit: First Breath N/A
Withdrawn NCT01569477 - Striving to Quit-Wisconsin Tobacco Quit Line N/A
Completed NCT01685996 - Zonisamide Augmentation of Varenicline Treatment for Smoking Cessation Phase 1/Phase 2
Active, not recruiting NCT01182766 - New Treatment for Alcohol and Nicotine Dependence Phase 2/Phase 3
Completed NCT00996034 - Nicotine Vaccination and Nicotinic Receptor Occupancy Phase 2
Completed NCT01061528 - Coping Skills Treatment for Smoking Cessation N/A
Completed NCT01943994 - Psilocybin-facilitated Smoking Cessation Treatment: A Pilot Study N/A
Withdrawn NCT01589081 - Effects of Progesterone on IV Nicotine-Induced Changes in Hormones and Subjective Ratings of Stimulant Drug Effect N/A
Suspended NCT01636336 - Effects of Progesterone on Smoked Nicotine Induced Changes in Hormones and Subjective Ratings of Stimulant Drug Effects N/A