View clinical trials related to Vaping.
Filter by:Young adults (N = 1,500) will participate in the online survey-based experiment. They will be randomly shown 10 videos, featuring influencers promoting e-cigarettes alongside healthy lifestyle activities (experimental group), or a healthy lifestyle activity alone (control). After watching each video, participants will rate perceptions of influencer credibility (i.e., honesty, trustworthiness, knowledge, attractiveness, intelligence, and popularity) on the scale of 0 (e.g., dishonest) to 100 (honest). Among all participants, harm perceptions of e-cigarettes will be assessed. Susceptibility to use e-cigarettes will be assessed among never users. These outcomes will then be compared among participants who perceived influencers as credible and those who perceived influencers as non-credible.
This study assess the ways in which e-cigarette product characteristics, such as flavors and nicotine salts, impact user experience to inform potential regulations.
This study assess the ways in which e-cigarette product characteristics, such as marketing strategies, impact user experience to inform potential regulations.
Almost one in ten young adults report current e-cigarette use, putting them at risk of developing nicotine addiction and long-term health effects of exposure to inhaled toxicants. Despite the need for effective treatments to help these young users quit, very few treatments targeting any type of tobacco use among young adults have been evaluated, particularly for young adults who vape and have unique treatment needs. To address these needs, this trial will evaluate a digital program for young adult e-cigarette users at all stages of readiness to quit called ACT on Vaping.
To demonstrate the reduction of Biomarkers of Exposure (BoExp) to selected harmful and potentially harmful constituents (HPHC) in smokers switching from cigarette (CIG) to P4M3, an Electronic Nicotine Delivery System (ENDS), compared to continuing cigarette smoking for 5 days.
This placebo-controlled Phase 2 study is being conducted at sites within the United States to evaluate the safety profile of 3 mg cytisinicline administered TID for 12 weeks.
This is a single-center, randomized, controlled, open-label, cross-over study with healthy adult smokers. The study will investigate the nicotine pharmacokinetic (PK) profiles of two e-liquid variants used with the P4M3 Gen 2.0 e-cigarette, compared to smoking combustible cigarettes. In addition, pharmacodynamic (PD) effects (subjective effects and related behavioral assessments), will be evaluated to provide further insights on product evaluation, craving, liking, puffing topography. The study will be conducted with three periods and six sequences in a cross-over design. This study is exploratory and there is no pre-specified hypothesis to be tested.
Electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS/e-cigarettes/vaping) are increasingly popular among teenagers around the world. The safety and potential adverse effects of ENDS in this population are largely unknown. While the aerosol, that users inhale, appears safe under laboratory conditions, there are still open questions, which have not yet been assessed. These cover (a) differences in exposure to chemicals (such as metabolites of Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) and metabolites of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs)) between healthy teenagers using ENDS and healthy teenagers not vaping, (b) effects of exposure to such chemicals on the body (measured by lung health indicators: airway symptoms such as coughing; lung function and lung structure tests; immune response of airway cells exposed to vapor; markers of oxidative stress), and (c) the role of nicotine metabolism. It is unknown which lung health indicator/s is/are most relevant to assess the effect of ENDS on lung health in teenagers. The primary hypothesis of this study is that there will be differences in exposure to chemicals, resulting in more or more severe airway symptoms in vaping teenagers compared to their non-vaping peers. While there might not yet exist any differences regarding lung function or structure, we expect already visible effects of vaping on the local immune response of primary cells isolated from airways in vaping teenagers as compared to non-vaping peers. In this study, participants of the Bern Basel Infant Lung Development (BILD) cohort, a birth cohort of healthy term-born infants and their follow-up, will serve as healthy, non-vaping controls.1 Vaping teenagers will be recruited independently from the BILD study through advertisements and visits to Bernese schools. Both populations combined represent the study population of the e-BILD study. All e-BILD study participants will undergo the same investigations. While these are currently planned for once in a time (so-called cross-sectional design) to compare results from non-vaping BILD study participants to otherwise healthy but vaping teenagers, repeated measures might follow, depending on the findings of the first phase.
The people of the U.S. Affiliated Pacific Islands (USAPI) face higher cancer incidence, especially lung/bronchia and head-and-neck cancer, and poorer cancer outcomes, compared with the U.S. nationally. This may partly be driven by the high rates of cigarette smoking and betel (areca) nut use in the USAPI. Previous data suggest that that adolescents on Guam, as young as middle school students report markedly higher e-cigarette and tobacco product use prevalence in the USAPI compared with the USAPI nationally. Guam youths are also at risk for the use of betel nuts. Yet, currently there are no tobacco product/areca nut use prevention programs that have been developed for and tested specifically USAPI adolescents. The proposed study will develop a school-based substance use prevention curriculum for e-cigarette, tobacco product, and areca nut use prevention among Guam youths. The curriculum will use lessons incorporating innovative videos and culturally grounded activities. The study's specific aims are: 1. To develop a school-based curriculum for e-cigarette, tobacco product (i.e., cigarette, smokeless tobacco), and betel nut use prevention among middle school students in Guam. 2. Test the efficacy of the school-based curriculum in a randomized controlled trial.
To examine reward processing and cognitive control both with and without the influence of vaporized nicotine in young adults with no history of cigarette use using EEG and fMRI. The goal is to determine whether acute nicotine administration using a Juul device would impact functional correlates of reward and inhibitory control in people who commonly use juul devices.