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Smoking (Tobacco) Addiction clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Smoking (Tobacco) Addiction.

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NCT ID: NCT05277831 Recruiting - Smoking Cessation Clinical Trials

Testing the Efficacy of A Scalable, Telephone-Delivered, Guided Imagery Tobacco Cessation Intervention

Start date: August 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The objective of this R01 application is to conduct a randomized controlled trial to test the efficacy of the Be Smoke Free, telephone-based, guided imagery (GI) intervention (IC) for smoking cessation compared to active behavioral control (CC). The study will recruit 1,200 diverse smokers from three states, Arizona, New York, and West Virginia to increase generalizability. Participants will be randomly assigned to receive either the IC or CC delivered by telephone by University of Arizona study coaches and will be assessed at 3- and 6-months post-enrollment by study staff. The primary outcome is biochemically verified 7-day point prevalence abstinence at 6 months. This innovative and rigorously designed project conducted by an experienced team has the potential to improve public health through the delivery of an innovative integrative GI intervention via telephone.

NCT ID: NCT05102123 Recruiting - Smoking Cessation Clinical Trials

PeRiopEratiVE smokiNg cessaTion Trial

PREVENT
Start date: January 15, 2024
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

PREVENT is a multicentre, 2x2 factorial, randomized clinical trial that aims to determine the effect of cytisine versus placebo, as well as the effect of video messaging to support smoking cessation versus standard of care in perioperative patients. This trial aims to investigate the effects of cytisine and text messaging on 6-month continuous abstinence rates. PREVENT will also assess secondary outcomes at 30 days, 56 days and 6 months post-randomization: 7-day point prevalence abstinence, urge to smoke, time to first lapse, time to relapse, number of cigarettes smoking if still smoking, pulmonary complications, vascular complications, wound and infectious complications, stroke, time in hospital and acute hospital care.