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This study will examine how abstinence-induced brain changes contribute to smoking cessation outcomes in treatment-seeking smokers.
Full description
Smoking is the greatest preventable cause of mortality and a significant economic burden. Even with the best available treatments, most smokers relapse within days or weeks after a quit attempt. Nicotine replacement therapy, the most widely used pharmacotherapy, yields end of treatment quit rates of <25% suggesting that managing nicotine withdrawal is not sufficient. To improve quit rates significantly, a more refined mechanistic understanding is needed. Neuroimaging can identify mechanisms underlying behavior change beyond self-report and behavioral measures. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies show that brief (e.g., 24 hr.) abstinence from smoking produces working memory deficits associated with reduced neural activity in cognitive control circuits. This study will examine how abstinence-induced brain changes contribute to clinical outcomes in treatment-seeking smokers. Using a validated fMRI abstinence challenge paradigm, 200 treatment-seeking smokers will complete two 1-hour pre-treatment fMRI scans: after smoking satiety and after 24 hours of confirmed abstinence. Approximately 50% of participants will complete the smoking session first, followed by the absence session, and the remainder will complete the opposite order (counterbalanced). The investigators will examine brain responses during the performance of tasks probing working memory. Participants will then set a target quit date, receive smoking cessation counseling, and be monitored for 6 months to assess time to relapse using a validated smoking relapse protocol.
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Inclusion criteria
Eligible participants will be:
Exclusion criteria
Subjects who present and/or self-report with the following criteria at any point during study participation will not be eligible to participate in the study:
Smoking Behavior:
Alcohol/Drugs:
Diagnosis or treatment for alcohol or drug abuse in the past two years as reported during phone screen (e.g., alcohol, opioids, cocaine, or stimulants);
Current alcohol consumption that exceeds 25 standard drinks/week;
Positive breath alcohol concentration test (BrAC greater than or equal to 0.01) at intake;
a. Participants testing positive for breath alcohol with a reading equal to or greater than .08 (the legal driving limit) or who are visibly impaired will be instructed not to drive themselves home after the appointment. If a participant needs to use a phone to call for a safe ride home, an office telephone will be made available to the participant.
A positive urine drug screen for cocaine, opiates, PCP, benzodiazepines, methadone, MDMA, amphetamine, methamphetamine, tri-cyclic antidepressants and/or barbiturates at any session;
Medication:
Current use or recent discontinuation (within the past 30 days at the time of Intake) of:
Smoking cessation medication (e.g., Zyban, Wellbutrin, Wellbutrin SR, Chantix, NRT);
Anti-psychotic medications;
Anti-depressants (tricyclics, SSRI's, selective and nonselective MAOIs, Wellbutrin/Zyban);
Anti-anxiety agents;
Anti-panic agents;
Prescription (e.g., Provigil, Ritalin) or over-the-counter stimulants;
Prescription sleep aids (e.g., Ambien, Lunesta) if used more than 2x/week. If participants report use less than twice a week, they will just be asked to refrain from use during imaging portion of the study.
Any medication that could compromise participant safety as determined by the Principal Investigator and/or Study Physician;
Daily use of:
Opiate-containing medications for chronic pain.
Medical/Neuropsychiatric:
fMRI-Related:
General Exclusion:
Primary purpose
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Interventional model
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119 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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