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NCT ID: NCT03234010 Completed - Smoking Clinical Trials

CSD170303: Study to Assess Nicotine Uptake in Smokers From Electronic Cigarettes

Start date: July 18, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

To determine the rate and amount of nicotine uptake with 10-minute ad libitum use of four different marketed electronic cigarettes. Furthermore, to measure overall product liking by subjects to assess potential willingness to seek out the Electronic Cigarette (EC) again in the future.

NCT ID: NCT03233997 Completed - Smoking Clinical Trials

CSD170302: Study to Assess Nicotine Uptake in Smokers From Electronic Cigarettes

Start date: July 18, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

To determine the rate and amount of nicotine uptake with 10-minute ad libitum use of four different marketed electronic cigarettes. Furthermore, to measure overall product liking by subjects to assess potential willingness to seek out the Electronic Cigarette (EC) again in the future.

NCT ID: NCT03219541 Completed - Smoking Clinical Trials

Feasibility and Acceptability of a Text Messaging Intervention to Increase Smoking Cessation in Vietnam

Start date: February 5, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to develop and then test the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary effect of a bidirectional text message smoking cessation intervention among Vietnamese smokers in Hanoi, Vietnam. The specific aim are: 1) To develop a smoking cessation text message library among Vietnamese smokers; 2) To evaluate message preferences, and the feasibility and acceptability of the bidirectional text message smoking cessation intervention; and 3) To assess the preliminary effect of a bidirectional mobile phone text message intervention on biochemically validated smoking abstinence.

NCT ID: NCT03213418 Terminated - Smoking Cessation Clinical Trials

Electroretinogram: a New Human Biomarker for Smoking Cessation Treatment

Start date: February 1, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This project aims to develop electroretinogram as a new putative marker for dopamine release, and as a predictor of treatment response among patients seeking treatment for smoking cessation. Tobacco smoking continues to be a major public health challenge. Dopamine is a neurotransmitter released in the brain. Several lines of evidence suggest that dopamine release deficit in the brain is involved in the development and maintenance of nicotine dependence. The investigators hypothesize that smokers who do not have a deficit in dopamine release will more readily respond to behavioral treatment for smoking cessation, and in particular, financial incentives contingent on abstinence (Contingency Management). Previous pilot data suggest electroretinogram (ERG), which records electrical signals from the retina in response to light, is a clinically accessible correlate to dopamine release in the brain. The project proposes an ERG-based biomarker, and a pilot clinical trial to apply this biomarker to personalize smoking cessation treatment. This clinically tractable biomarker of central dopamine release may have a large number of future applications in the diagnosis and treatment of other mental illnesses and substance use disorders. The study will recruit normal controls and smokers, measure ERG before and after a standard dose of oral immediate release methylphenidate. Smokers will undergo a 12-week standardized treatment course of CM. The investigators will test whether smoking status and the response to CM are correlated to changes in ERG in response to methylphenidate challenge.

NCT ID: NCT03209622 Completed - Clinical trials for Acute Coronary Syndrome

Smoking Cessation After Acute Coronary Syndrome

SCACS
Start date: January 2, 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

A randomized controlled trial was conducted in cardiology department and smoking cessation center of University Hospital of Monastir (Tunisia). All smokers Hospitalized for ACS were included. Participants were randomly assigned to either group "A", initiating Nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) in intra-hospitalization or a control group "B" that received NRT after hospital discharge. The end point assessment was smoking abstinence at 24 weeks following randomization, defined as self-reported abstinence in the past week before the 24 week clinic visit confirmed by a measured exhaled carbon monoxide ≤8 ppm. Data were analyzed by intention to treat.

NCT ID: NCT03206619 Completed - Smoking Cessation Clinical Trials

A Health Recommeder System to Tailor Message Preferences in a Smoking Cessation Programme

Start date: September 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Patients attending the smoking cessation programme at the Virgen del Rocío University Hospital under the SoLoMo clinical trial of the SmokeFreeBrain project and provided with the SoLoMo mobile app will be observed for one year. This mobile app which sends the patients tailored health motivational messages selected by a health recommender system, and based on their user profile retrieved from an electronic health record. Patients' messages feedback and interactions with the app will be analyzed and evaluated following an observational prospective methodology to see whether patients like the messages, and measure the patient engagement with the health recommender system.

NCT ID: NCT03194958 Completed - Smoking Cessation Clinical Trials

Helping Poor Smokers Quit

Start date: June 5, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Using a 2x2 randomized factorial design, we will conduct a statewide field trial in Missouri to compare the relative and combined effects of these two strategies for augmenting an existing, evidence-based tobacco quitline program. Among 2000 low-income smokers, half will receive standard Missouri quitline services and half will receive new Specialized Quitline services targeted to this group. In each of these groups, half also will receive calls from a trained navigator to help them address unmet Basic Needs and the accompanying psychological distress that act as barriers to smoking cessation.

NCT ID: NCT03191227 Completed - Obesity Clinical Trials

The Cork and Kerry Diabetes and Heart Disease Study (Phase II) Mitchelstown Cohort

Mitchelstown
Start date: April 2010
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

The aim of the Cork and Kerry Study Phase II (Mitchelstown cohort recruited 2010-11) is to provide an updated profile of glucose tolerance status, cardiovascular health and their related factors in an Irish adult general population sample and to compare the findings with those obtained during baseline assessment of Phase I of the Cork and Kerry study (1998) and the rescreen (2008).

NCT ID: NCT03187860 Terminated - Asthma Clinical Trials

Ciliation and Mucus Rheology Parameters Determined Via Air-liquid-interface Cell Cultures in Non-smoking, Smoking, COPD and Asthmatic Patients

RhéMuc
Start date: June 19, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a prospective study comparing 4 groups: (1) non-smoking controls, (2) smokers without chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), (3) smokers with COPD, (4) severe asthma. Bronchial biopsy specimens from each subject will be obtained to produce air-liquid-interface cell cultures. These will then be used to make observations concerning cilia and mucus rheology. This is a first pilot study. The working hypothesis is that the largest group differences will be found for cilia densities; the latter metric was thus chosen as a primary criterion.

NCT ID: NCT03185546 Completed - Smoking Clinical Trials

Project 2 Cigarette and E-cigarette Nicotine Content and E-liquid Flavors

Start date: August 6, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Project 2 will evaluate the impact of very low nicotine content cigarettes, e-cigarette nicotine content, and e-cigarette flavoring on cigarettes smoked per day, nicotine exposure, puff topography, discomfort/dysfunction, other health-related behaviors, nicotine/tobacco dependence, biomarkers of tobacco exposure, intention to quit, compensatory smoking, other tobacco use, cardiovascular function, and perceived risk. Project 2 will also evaluate differences between conditions in compliance with product use and the ability to abstain from cigarette smoking when provided a financial incentive for abstinence from combusted tobacco. This is not a treatment program for smoking.