View clinical trials related to Smoking.
Filter by:Some smokers who try e-cigarettes transition completely from cigarettes to e-cigarettes, but others continue to use both products, or abandon e-cigarettes and return completely to cigarettes. One factor that likely impacts these tobacco use patterns is the e-cigarette device used. The majority of e-cigarettes purchased today are one of two "types:" customizable tanks or pods. These e-cigarette types differ from each other in critical ways, like nicotine delivery and sensory characteristics, that are likely to impact use by influencing the relative reinforcement value of the product. The present study will be a randomized trial investigating the impact of e-cigarette device type on reinforcement value and use among current smokers. Current smokers (n=100) will be randomly assigned to either a control group that does not receive an e-cigarette or one of two e-cigarette types: a customizable tank, or a pod. The impact of device type on relative reinforcement value will be assessed using a choice task. Participants will also take home their assigned e-cigarette for a three-week sampling period. Primary outcomes include relative reinforcement value (choices to smoke in the lab-based choice task), cigarette smoking behavior (cigarettes smoked per day during sampling), and uptake (e-cigarette puffing episodes per day during sampling).
The risk of lung cancer varies by individual and by ethnic/racial group. In this study the investigators will explore how individual differences in the metabolism of a tobacco-specific lung carcinogen may contribute to the variable risk of lung cancer between ethnic/racial groups. In this 10 day clinical trial, Japanese Americans will smoke a cigarette containing deuterium-labeled 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone (NNK), a tobacco-specific lung carcinogen. The study cigarette will be smoked for 7 days. This will allow for NNK metabolic profiling and determining the effect of CYP2A6 genotype on the level of NNK α-hydroxylation in Japanese Americans smokers using [pyridine- D4]-NNK containing cigarettes.
This study will be a single-center, controlled, open-label, parallel study to evaluate the puffing patterns of healthy adult consumers of tobacco products switching from a usual brand (UB) Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems (ENDS) product to an ENDS Investigational Product (IP) product with 4.8% nicotine over a three-week ambulatory period. This study will be conducted in support of a Premarket Tobacco Product Application (PMTA) ENDS submission to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Center for Tobacco Products (CTP).
This is an open-label dosing pilot study of 15 patients aged 18-50 years of age with diagnoses of Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) randomized to 1 of 3 treatment arms. The study will consist of a screening evaluation performed within the course of 2 weeks, followed by an active treatment period of 28 days where treatment arm 1 will take a supervised dose of 300mg DXM every 14 days for 28 days, treatment arm 2 will take the FDA approved maximum daily ingestion for cough (60mg DXM) daily for 28 days, and treatment arm 3 will take 1 supervised dose of 300mg DXM and 60mg for the remaining 28 days. After the active treatment period, subjects will be followed for 65 days with safety and psychiatric assessments at designated timepoints.
It is a clinical trial conducted on smokers with chronic periodontitis in which the participants are divided into two groups and one group is provided with antibiotics while the other with probiotics as an adjunct to non-surgical therapy. The participants were assessed for change in probing pocket depths, attachment loss, bleeding on probing, plaque index and gingival index after 1-month and 3-month period.
This trial studies how well a centralized care strategy works in improving the quality of smoking cessation and shared decision making among patients who smoke and are considering lung cancer screening. The centralized care strategy is a model where smokers eligible for lung cancer screening are referred to a dedicated tobacco treatment program where they receive both the shared decision-making and initiate smoking cessation counseling prior to their visit with a primary care provider. Utilizing the centralized care model may work better in helping people quit smoking and make informed decisions about lung cancer screening compared to usual care.
Cigarette smoking remains highly prevalent among persons living with HIV (PLWH). Quitting smoking can have important health benefits for this population. However, PLWH have historically had a difficult time quitting smoking. This is likely due, at least in part, to poor medication adherence. Poor adherence to medication is a well-documented issue among PLWH. Research shows that not taking smoking cessation medications as prescribed can limit their treatment effectiveness. Improving adherence to smoking cessation medications will likely increase smoking cessation attempt success. Mobile phone applications and behavioral interventions show promise for improving adherence to smoking cessation medications and cessation outcomes among PLWH. Therefore, this trial will assess 1) whether a mobile phone application is a feasible and acceptable intervention for improving medication adherence; 2) whether use of the mobile phone app improves adherence to varenicline; and 3) smoking cessation outcomes.
To date the majority of experimental tobacco regulatory science has focused specifically on the impact of possible tobacco product standards (e.g. limiting e-cigarette flavor) on the use of the single tobacco product targeted by the standard (e.g. e-cigarettes) among individuals who primarily or solely use the targeted product (e.g. vapers). Whereas this "single target" approach has yielded a large amount of actionable evidence, it has also resulted in a significant gap in the regulatory science evidence base for two reasons: First, the focus on single tobacco product users has resulted in very little evidence regarding the impact of possible new product standards among multiple tobacco product (MTP) users. MTP users make up a sizeable proportion (30-40%) of the tobacco using population and individuals who use e-cigarettes (EC) and combusted cigarettes (CC) comprise the largest MTP using group (40% of MTP users). A lack of data on this population means that estimates of the impact of new product standards on public health are incomplete. Despite some data derived from hypothetical tasks, little experimental research exists to evaluate how potential tobacco regulations might impact the use of other tobacco products in addition to the targeted product. It is critical to anticipate how potential restrictions on the EC market may impact EC and other tobacco product-such as CC-use. In the proposed research, we will recruit young adult (age 21-29) dual EC/CC users evaluate the demand for participants' usual brand CC as compared to EC that vary in nicotine content (e.g., 5% vs. 3% pods). Participants will engage in a validated concurrent choice task in which they will work for fixed doses of EC vapor or CC smoke in exchange for expended effort. In addition, we will seek to answer this question in samples of dual EC and CC users-individuals who, because they regularly use both EC and CC, are most vulnerable to changes in the appeal of EC and CC brought about by a product standard limiting EC flavors.
Smoking is a risk factor for ophthalmologic diseases. Inflammation might play a role in their pathogenesis. This study elucidates intraocular cytokine profiles in smokers and non smokers.
This is a two-arm, single use, single-center, randomized, 10-sequence per arm, open-label, crossover pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic (PK/PD) study, designed to evaluate elements of abuse liability (AL) including subjective effects, plasma nicotine uptake, and physiological measures during and following ad libitum use of the study investigational products (IPs) by generally healthy subjects.