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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Withdrawn

Administrative data

NCT number NCT05625685
Other study ID # 1P50MD017347-01
Secondary ID
Status Withdrawn
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date October 2, 2023
Est. completion date November 30, 2023

Study information

Verified date May 2024
Source Meharry Medical College
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The goal of this clinical trial is to test a GPS (Global Positioning System)-enabled smartphone app (QuitBuddy) in current smokers. The main questions it aims to answer are: - Is Quitbuddy a good treatment for quitting smoking and "staying quit"? - Will a second treatment that connects people to help for their social and financial needs improve Quitbuddy? Participants will: - get nicotine lozenges in the mail - check in with the study team to report on their quitting progress after 1 day, 1 week, 1 month, 2 months, 3 months, and 6 months Researchers will compare Quitbuddy to an app made by the National Cancer Institute to see if Quitbuddy is better for helping people stay quit.


Description:

Tobacco smoking is a primary preventable trans-diagnostic risk factor that if targeted more effectively, could reduce a wide range of health disparities in prevalence, severity, treatment efficacy, and mortality across many chronic health conditions (e.g., diabetes, obstructive sleep apnea), reduce treatment complexity/multi-morbidity, and reduce healthcare costs up to 80%. The Southeast, in particular, has an urgent need to disrupt the status quo of tobacco control (<2% The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommended tobacco control appropriations; highest smoking and mortality) driven in large part through neglected patterns of social determinants of health (SDoH; poverty, access to care) that disproportionately impact racial and ethnic minorities in the form of greater smoking and chronic disease rates, and ultimately nearly a decade of life lost. Unfortunately, only 5% of smoking cessation attempts last at least one year, with lower success among Black smokers even though they smoke at similar rates and intensity, and make more quit attempts. Accordingly, mobile health (mHealth) may have particular utility in addressing racial disparities. Black smokers show high engagement rates with smartphones to access healthcare and greater adherence to digital interventions, which may facilitate tailoring to meet distinct needs. There is an urgent need to overcome equity gaps, which will require diversity and inclusion of individuals from underrepresented races/ethnicities to identify effective treatments. There is a need for just-in-time adaptive interventions (JITAIs) that 1) can be deployed rapidly (ideally before craving occurs), 2) effectively prevent or attenuate cravings quickly, and 3) are amenable to personalized treatment. Quitbuddy, the automated, yet personalized, JITAI app developed by the investigators, allows patients to prepare for high-risk situations before they arise, effectively promoting abstinence and preventing relapse. The overall goals are to optimize smart algorithms, identify personalized relapse risk, and automatically prompt NRT delivery in a real-time, preemptive manner, upon approaching personalized high-risk locations. Results from a National Institute on Drug abuse (NIDA)-funded (K23) pilot randomized controlled trial demonstrated outstanding usability (top 10% of over 500 apps), acceptability (>80% compliance), and technical feasibility (<10% GPS data loss). The investigators will build upon these promising data by testing effectiveness in a fully powered and rigorous SMART design with diverse representation of underserved populations and meeting community needs for SDoH interventions. Specific Aims Aims 1 & 2: Evaluate QuitBuddy and SDoH augmentation intervention effectiveness for smoking cessation and relapse prevention via pragmatic remote SMART design (N=2,090). Expected Outcome: Superior 6-month biochemically verified abstinence rates for the QuitBuddy and SDoH augmentation interventions, relative to controls. Exploratory Aims: Test potential moderators/mediators of the effectiveness of the interventions. This approach integrates for the first time established theories of relapse risk, evidence-based treatment, smartphone/GPS technology, and SDoH. This project offers high-impact solutions to address health disparities across a wide range of chronic diseases that disproportionately affect under-served populations.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Withdrawn
Enrollment 0
Est. completion date November 30, 2023
Est. primary completion date November 30, 2023
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender All
Age group 21 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - At least 21 years of age - Smoking at least 10 cigarettes per day for the past year - Literate in English/Spanish - Willing to make a NRT-aided quit attempt within the next week Exclusion Criteria: - Pregnancy (according to urine pregnancy test) - Breastfeeding or planning to become pregnant (self-report) - Recent (past 3 months) cardiovascular trauma: myocardial infarction, stroke (self-report) - Current use (past 30 days) of alternative tobacco products (e.g., electronic cigarettes, smokeless tobacco) or smoking cessation medications (self-report)

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Other:
Quitbuddy
Participants will be mailed a one week supply of nicotine lozenges as nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) for their upcoming quit attempt, with the ability to order more as needed. Participants will have a set "Target Quit Date" (TQD) set on Day 8 after enrollment, following one week of ad-lib smoking that comprises the pre-TQD EMA/GPS smoking data collection. GPS guided NRT usage prompts, via hotspot algorithms, will be provided to participants in the Quitbuddy Arm. Participants will contribute four weeks of post-TQD EMA/GPS data to capture lapses and NRT use in real-time. Carbon Monoxide (CO) levels will be tested at each of the six post-TQD remote assessments to provide objective verification of smoking status (i.e., 1 day, 1 week, 1 month, 2 month, 3 month, and 6 month abstinence rates). Computerized data collection methods (RedCap) will be used throughout the study to optimize quality assurance.
Control
Participants will be mailed a one week supply of nicotine lozenges as nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) for their upcoming quit attempt, with the ability to order more as needed. Participants will have a set "Target Quit Date" (TQD) set on Day 8 after enrollment, following one week of ad-lib smoking that comprises the pre-TQD smoking data collection. Participants will contribute four weeks of post-TQD data to capture lapses and NRT use. CO levels will be tested at each of the six post-TQD remote assessments to provide objective verification of smoking status (i.e., 1 day, 1 week, 1 month, 2 month, 3 month, and 6 month abstinence rates). Computerized data collection methods (RedCap) will be used throughout the study to optimize quality assurance.
SDoH Augmentation
The SDoH intervention is based on the findhelp.org online platform, with customization to meet the specific needs of the study and communities being served: includes validated SDoH assessments, personalized social needs searching based on priorities, access to the most comprehensive social service database, and a streamlined closed loop referral system that integrates with workflows.
SDoH Control
No SDoH intervention

Locations

Country Name City State
United States Meharry Medical College Nashville Tennessee

Sponsors (3)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Bryan W. Heckman City of Hope Medical Center, Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine and Research Institute

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Abstinence Rate Self-report. Participant enters number of cigarettes smoked. 24 hours
Primary NRT Compliance Self report. Participant enters number of nicotine lozenges used. 24 hours
Primary Cravings Self reported number of cravings experienced. 24 hours
Primary Withdrawal 1-day Minnesota Nicotine Withdrawal Scale - A nine-item self-report scale for examining the severity of nicotine withdrawal symptoms in a subject. Participants select 0 (none) - 4 (severe) for each of the items. Higher scores correspond to higher perceived severity of withdrawal. Measured one day after a participant's target quit-date.
Primary Withdrawal 1-week Minnesota Nicotine Withdrawal Scale - A nine-item self-report scale for examining the severity of nicotine withdrawal symptoms in a subject. Participants select 0 (none) - 4 (severe) for each of the items. Higher scores correspond to higher perceived severity of withdrawal. Measured one week after a participant's target quit-date.
Primary Withdrawal 1-month Minnesota Nicotine Withdrawal Scale - A nine-item self-report scale for examining the severity of nicotine withdrawal symptoms in a subject. Participants select 0 (none) - 4 (severe) for each of the items. Higher scores correspond to higher perceived severity of withdrawal. Measured one month after a participant's target quit-date.
Primary Withdrawal 2-month Minnesota Nicotine Withdrawal Scale - A nine-item self-report scale for examining the severity of nicotine withdrawal symptoms in a subject. Participants select 0 (none) - 4 (severe) for each of the items. Higher scores correspond to higher perceived severity of withdrawal. Measured two months after a participant's target quit-date.
Primary Withdrawal 3-month Minnesota Nicotine Withdrawal Scale - A nine-item self-report scale for examining the severity of nicotine withdrawal symptoms in a subject. Participants select 0 (none) - 4 (severe) for each of the items. Higher scores correspond to higher perceived severity of withdrawal. Measured three months after a participant's target quit-date.
Primary Withdrawal 6-month Minnesota Nicotine Withdrawal Scale - A nine-item self-report scale for examining the severity of nicotine withdrawal symptoms in a subject. Participants select 0 (none) - 4 (severe) for each of the items. Higher scores correspond to higher perceived severity of withdrawal. Measured six months after a participant's target quit-date.
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