View clinical trials related to Smoking Abstinence.
Filter by:This is a cross-sectional 3-group study with subjects enrolled and matched by region (Asia, Europe), age, sex, and average daily product consumption over the last 2 years as self-reported. The study will be conducted as a multi-center and multi-regional study, to demonstrate beneficial effects of switching from cigarettes to THS.
This study will evaluate Comprehensive Chronic Care (CCC), a healthcare treatment approach designed to increase smoking treatment engagement and abstinence among primary care patients who smoke. This research will compare CCC with Standard of Care (SC) on the following outcomes: abstinence at 18 months (primary outcome), treatment reach, and cost-effectiveness. Participation in the study will last 18 months.
In this single-blind, randomized trial, undertaken in China with 8-week interventions and follow-up to 52 weeks, about 2,200 providers will be randomly allocated to the intervention or control group.
This study investigated whether being on transdermal hormone replacement therapy (HRT) influenced smoking cessation variables in postmenopausal women undergoing short-term abstinence from cigarettes. Women were recruited into two groups according to their pre-enrollment medication status - currently on HRT (n = 17) or not on HRT (n = 13). The HRT group had their prior medication replaced with a standard 0.1 mg estradiol transdermal system and 2.5 mg of Cycrin daily. Following two weeks of medication adjustment, participants continued smoking as usual for one week, at which time baseline measurements were taken. For the remaining two weeks, participants were instructed to quit smoking. They were provided with smoking cessation counseling and monitored for abstinence. Data were collected during five clinic visits on all dependent measures: Minnesota Nicotine Withdrawal Scale, Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) Scale, Profile of Mood States, Motor Speed Tasks, and Reaction Time Test. Part II is identical to Part I, except it randomizes participants to use nicotine patch or not.
The purpose of this study is to assess the safety and efficacy of AFQ056 and nicotine compared to placebo on craving and withdrawal symptoms during voluntary smoking stoppage in healthy smokers. This study will also assess how the body interacts with AFQ056.