Tobacco Use Disorder Clinical Trial
Official title:
Working Memory Training Combined With Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation in Smokers: 2x2 Factorial Study
Verified date | April 2022 |
Source | Kent State University |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Smoking remains the leading cause of preventable death in the United States, and current first-line treatments leave the majority of tobacco dependent individuals unable to quit. The inability to quit despite motivation to do so, is thought to result in part, from self-control failure. Working memory (WM) deficits contribute to imbalanced self-control and allow automatic impulses to drive behavior. Thus, WM plays a critical role in addictive behavior, and is particularly relevant to smoking. Indeed, a strong link between WM and smoking has been established in the literature; most notably, degree of WM impairment and deficits in activation in associated brain regions predict time to relapse, and WM moderates the relationship between craving and relapse. Given these insights, researchers have been examining interventions that may target WM including WM training (WMT) and repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (rTMS). WMT involves taxing this executive function repeatedly over time and has shown positive preliminary results in improving measures of self-control and reducing consumption of addictive substances. Similarly, rTMS, a non-invasive brain stimulation procedure that stimulates neuronal tissues and increases cortical excitability, has been shown to increase WM capacity and reduce craving and consumption of several addictive substances including nicotine. While these interventions have demonstrated initial promise in affecting addictive behaviors, the magnitude and durability of their effects may be limited. Recently, researchers have posited - but not yet empirically tested - that WMT administered in combination with rTMS may result in an additive or supra-additive effect in treating addictive processes. This is highly significant; the clinical utility of rTMS over current first line treatments may be limited if factors with potential to enhance its effectiveness are not examined. Given these recent advances in the literature, the primary objective of the proposed study is to evaluate the individual and combined effects of Working Memory (WM) training and repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (rTMS) on WM performance and smoking behaviors as well as critical mediators of these effects. These aims will be examined in a sample of tobacco dependent adults (N=130) utilizing a 2x2 factorial experimental design including four groups (WMT+rTMS, sham WMT+rTMS, WMT+sham TMS, and sham WMT+sham rTMS) capable of isolating independent and combined effects of WMT and rTMS.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 50 |
Est. completion date | January 31, 2021 |
Est. primary completion date | January 31, 2021 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 60 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - meet safety guidelines for application of rTMS - be 18-60 years of age - have smoked cigarettes regularly for at least one year - currently smoke at least 10 cigarettes per day - have a carbon monoxide (CO) level >10 ppm - currently use no other nicotine products regularly Exclusion Criteria: - meet criteria for current alcohol or substance dependence - have a current affective disorder (depression, dysthymia, or mania) or psychotic symptoms - are currently pregnant or lactating, or intend to become pregnant - have a health condition for which rTMS is contraindicated |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Brown University | Providence | Rhode Island |
United States | Butler Hospital | Providence | Rhode Island |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Kent State University | Brown University, Butler Hospital |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Time to Lapse on a Smoking Lapse Analogue Task | The Delay to Smoking Analogue Task is a behavioral choice paradigm that is sensitive to smoking medication effects in which participants earn monetary rewards for delaying initiation of cigarette smoking in 5-minute increments over a 50-minute period, following 3-hours of observed smoking deprivation. Range = 0 - 50 minutes. Higher scores indicate better ability to delay smoking. | an average of 30 days after baseline | |
Primary | Working Memory Performance 1 | NIH Examiner N-back score. The minimum value is 0 and maximum is 90, higher scores indicate a better outcome. Calculated change scores are presented (outcome score at day 30 minus baseline score). | Change from baseline score to score at 30 days | |
Primary | Working Memory Performance 2 | NIH Examiner Dot Counting Task score. The minimum total score is 0 and the maximum score is 27, higher scores indicate a better outcome. Calculated change scores are presented (outcome score at day 30 minus baseline score). | Change from baseline score to score at 30 days | |
Primary | Working Memory Performance 3 | Mean End Level Score on Maastricht University Working Memory Tasks. For each scale (i.e. visuospatial, back-digit, and letter-sequencing) the minimum total is 3 and the maximum is 15, higher scores indicate a better outcome. | Change from baseline score to score at 30 days | |
Primary | Cigarette Consumption | Self reported number of cigarettes smoked daily | throughout 60 day study participation, cigarettes per day assessed at outcome reported | |
Secondary | Delay Discounting | Discounting Rate on the Monetary Choice Questionnaire, assessed by k (log transformed). Individuals made hypothetical choices between smaller immediate rewards (e.g. $11 today) and larger delayed rewards (e.g. $30 in 7 days) at varying levels of hyperbolic-like discounting. Overall temporal discounting function (k) was assessed; larger values indicate steeper discounting which reflects a worse outcome.
Total score range = 0 - 0.25. |
Change from baseline score to score at 30 days | |
Secondary | Cigarette Demand | Demand characteristics on the Cigarette Purchase Task. Demand sensitivity indicates sensitivity to change in price, with higher values reflecting higher sensitivity to the monetary reinforcer rather than the substance, thus higher scores reflect a better outcome. Score range = 0 - .100. | Change from baseline score to score at 30 days |
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