Smoking Clinical Trial
Official title:
Characterization of Nicotine Exposure and Urge-to-Smoke Following a Single Controlled Administration and Short-Term Ad Lib Use of Electronic Cigarettes and Conventional Cigarettes in Adult Smokers
This trial was the initial characterization of the blu™ products being studied, with the purpose of gaining an understanding of the exposure to nicotine and craving reduction attained following use of blu™ e-cigarettes by adult smokers. Two types of exposures were utilized: a single controlled administration and a short-term ad lib use. As smoking behaviors vary from smoker to smoker, a controlled administration allows for some standardization of nicotine "dose" for each of the study products to better understand their uptake characteristics as well as urge reduction achieved under controlled conditions. Further evaluation under ad lib product use conditions provides insight into product self-administration behaviors that will allow subjects to achieve acceptable levels of urge reduction. Comparisons were made to evaluate differences between blu™ formulations as well as to the market-leading conventional cigarette, Marlboro Gold King Size ("Marlboro cigarette').
This was a randomized, partially single-blinded, 6-period crossover study of 24 subjects.
The primary objectives of this study were to:
1. characterize the rate and extent of nicotine exposure following a single controlled
administration and ad lib use of blu™ e-cigarettes,
2. characterize smoking urge following a single controlled administration and ad lib use
of blu™ e cigarettes.
The secondary objectives of this study were to:
1. Compare the pharmacokinetic (PK) profile of nicotine between selected blu™ formulations
and between the blu™ products and Marlboro cigarettes following a single controlled
administration and ad lib use of each study product.
2. Compare changes in smoking urge within and between selected blu™ formulations and
between the blu™ products and Marlboro cigarettes following a single controlled
administration and ad lib use of each study product.
3. Compare the changes in exhaled carbon monoxide (CO) within and between selected blu™
formulations and between the blu™ products and Marlboro cigarettes following use of
each study product.
4. Assess the tolerability of each study product following short-term use.
Subjects were provided blu™ Classic Tobacco and Magnificent Menthol products containing 2.4%
nicotine, glycerin vehicle for 1 week prior to participation in the study to familiarize
themselves with the use of the products. Subjects were confined to the clinic for the entire
study duration and abstained from use of nicotine containing products for a period of at
least 36 hours prior to each product administration. Each product administration included a
controlled product administration and a 1 hour ad lib use of the study products. The
controlled product administration consisted of 50 inhalations of the assigned e-cigarette
product (5-second inhalations at 30-second intervals) or smoking one Marlboro cigarette
(30-second intervals with the subjects' normal inhalation duration) with inhalations
monitored by the clinical staff. The start of the ad lib product use was 30 minutes
following the start of the controlled product use. During ad lib use, subjects were allowed
to self-administer the e-cigarette product as desired for the entire hour and were
responsible for maintaining their own inhalation counts. During the ad lib cigarette product
use, subjects requested the product from the staff as desired and maintained their own
inhalation counts.
Pharmacokinetics: Blood samples for the measurement of plasma nicotine concentrations were
taken by direct venipuncture at 10 minutes prior to, and 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 45, 60, 75,
and 90 minutes following the start of the controlled product administration.
Non-compartmental PK parameters such as Peak Plasma Concentration and Area under the Plasma
Concentration versus time curve were calculated from the plasma nicotine concentration-time
data.
Pharmacodynamics: Smoking urge was assessed using a 100 mm visual analog scale (VAS).
Assessments occurred within 1 minute prior to the -10 (pre-product administration), 5, 15,
25, 30, 60, and 90-minute PK blood draws. The following non-compartmental Pharmacodynamic
parameters were calculated from the smoking urge change-from-baseline data: Emax0-30,
Emaxreduction0-30, AUEC0-30, tEmax0-30, AUEC30-90, and E90.
Other Measurements: Exhaled CO measurements occurred at approximately 20 minutes prior to
the start of the controlled product use and at approximately 15 minutes following the end of
the ad lib product use.
Tolerability: Adverse events, physical examinations, vital signs, ECGs, and laboratory
safety tests were assessed to evaluate enrolment criteria and subject safety during the
study.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Pharmacokinetics/Dynamics Study, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Subject)
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