View clinical trials related to Tobacco Use Disorder.
Filter by:The FDA has concluded that flavors (e.g. menthol) are associated with greater addiction potential in tobacco cigarettes (Gottlieb March 13, 2019). Whether the same is true for e-cigarettes and non-menthol flavors is unclear and our study should help answer this question. Our major hypothesis is that the pharmacological effect of nicotine to induce addiction will be greater with use of a preferred e-cigarette flavor than with use of a non-preferred flavor. The pharmacological effect will be measured by how much a larger nicotine dose increases addiction potential compared to a smaller dose.
This study is a randomized controlled trial. It is estimated that 80 quitters will be recruited, and they will be randomly included in the experimental group and 40 in the control group. The experimental group will be involved in heart rate variability biological feedback training for eight weeks, and the control group will receive conventional treatment. Use the scale to assess the symptoms of nicotine withdrawal-anxiety, depression and insomnia, as well as the degree of nicotine dependence before and after the intervention; the autonomic nervous function of the participants was measured by heart rhythm variation before and after the intervention; in addition, the cessation of smoking was tracked by telephone once a month for six Months. Discuss interventional biological feedback training and evaluate its effectiveness in improving heart rate variability, which represents autonomic nervous function, and alleviating nicotine withdrawal anxiety, insomnia, and depression symptoms, as well as nicotine dependence.
The study is a randomized crossover trial. Current smokers will complete a session with each product: usual brand cigarette, e-cigarette, and heat-not-burn. The objective of this survey is to assess for ongoing use of study products and is part of safety monitoring.
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) is caused primarily by smoking and smoking cessation is the first-line treatment for slowing disease progression. Despite this, nearly 50% of COPD patients continue to smoke following diagnosis. Smokers with COPD report high rates of co-occurring conditions - nicotine dependence, depression, and anxiety - which serve as barriers to quitting. The current study will pilot test a behavioral intervention designed to target the common psychological factors underlying these co-occurring conditions and foster smoking cessation among COPD patients.
The survey participants are divided into a smoking and non-smoking group. The smoker group is further divided according to the quantity and quality of nicotine ("normal" smoking, vaping). After reaching a steady state, the cutaneous blood flow at rest in the extremities of all participants is determined by Laser Doppler Imaging as a reference value. Laser Doppler Imaging produces images of the blood flow using perfusion units (PU). Subsequently, the perfusion is measured again after smoking/vaping. The difference in skin perfusion of the extremities is calculated (δ-Perfusion). All measurements are performed under controlled vital parameters (body temperature, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, heart rate) and controlled room temperature as well as 15-minute acclimatization of the patients.
Tobacco and cannabis co-use is a common and growing public health problem, especially in states that have legalized cannabis. There are no pharmacologic treatments for co-occurring tobacco and cannabis use. Co-use may make quitting either substance more difficult, given the synergistic effects of cannabis and nicotine on neurobiological systems that mediate reward and shared cues reinforcing co-use. N-acetylcysteine (NAC), an FDA-approved medication and over-the-counter supplement, has shown promise in animal studies and randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in reducing tobacco and cannabis craving and use.
The study team will conduct a feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy trial comparing Learn to Quit-HIV (n=30) to an app based on U.S. Clinical Practice Guidelines only (NCI QuitGuide; n=30) among HIV-positive smokers. Both apps will be integrated with NRT and ongoing HIV clinical care.
The Investigators propose a randomized, placebo-controlled trial to test the hypothesis that varenicline added to group behavioral and texting support will be well tolerated and improve vaping cessation rates among nicotine dependent adolescents who vape, do not smoke regularly, and are willing to try treatment to stop vaping compared to placebo added to group behavioral and texting support. The study will consist of a three-arm randomized, placebo-controlled, parallel-group study of (1) varenicline up to 1 mg bid for 12 weeks added to behavioral and texting support compared with (2) behavioral and texting support and placebo and (3) monitoring only. The primary comparison will be of vaping cessation rates in those assigned to varenicline vs placebo.To do this, the investigators propose to enroll 300 adolescents aged 16-25 who meet eligibility criteria.
Pilot, eight week, open-label, within-subject cross over trial of four weeks of standard clinical care (SCC) in an outpatient substance abuse treatment program and four weeks of SCC and varenicline among current and former tobacco smokers with frequent cannabis use.
CESTO 2 is a 318 participants, 3-arm, multicentric, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled Phase II clinical trial. The main objectives are to select the most efficient dose and to assess long-term efficacy of NFL-101 compared to placebo, for abrupt cessation and for reduction before cessation.