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About
The purpose of this research program is to understand how a biomarker called the "nicotine metabolite ratio" (also referred to as NMR) may influence a smoker's ability to quit smoking.
Full description
Smoking is an enormous public health problem with a great need for research to improve treatment outcomes. Our prior data indicates that the cytochrome P450 2A6 (CYP2A6) enzyme is critical in the metabolic inactivation of nicotine, and also influences smoking behavior and response to therapies. With a vision toward translation of our research to practice, we have characterized a genetically-informed biomarker of CYP2A6 activity, specifically the nicotine metabolite ratio (NMR; 3'hydroxycotinine/cotinine), which reflects both CYP2A6 genetic variation and environmental influences on CYP2A6 activity. The NMR is measured non-invasively in smokers with established reliability, stability, analytic validity, and efficacy as a predictor of the ability to quit smoking and treatment response in multiple retrospective trials. Translation of these findings to clinical practice requires validation in a prospective clinical trial comparing alternative therapies for smoking cessation. Thus, the proposed trial is a prospective, stratified, placebo-controlled, multi-center clinical trial of alternative therapies for smoking cessation treatment in approximately 1,200 smokers. Randomization to placebo (PLA), transdermal nicotine (TN), or varenicline (VAR) will be stratified prospectively based on the nicotine metabolite ratio (NMR). Abstinence from smoking at the end of treatment will be the primary outcome. Quit rate at 6-month follow-up is a secondary outcome. To facilitate translation to practice, analysis of the cost-effectiveness of our proposed approach will also be completed. The proposed research provides the next critical step to validate a genetically-informed diagnostic tool, the NMR, which clinicians can use in the future to optimize treatment decisions for their patients who wish to quit smoking.
Enrollment
Sex
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Inclusion criteria
Eligible participants will be males and females
Exclusion criteria
Smoking Behavior
Alcohol/Drug Exclusion Criteria
Medical Exclusion Criteria
Women who are pregnant, planning a pregnancy, or lactating.
History of epilepsy or a seizure disorder.
Current medical problems for which transdermal nicotine is contraindicated including:
Serious or unstable disease within the past 6 months.
History (last 6 months) of abnormal heart rhythms, tachycardia and cardiovascular disease (stroke, angina, heart attack) may result in ineligibility. These conditions will be evaluated on a case by case basis by the Study Physician.
Inability to provide a blood sample to be used to assess nicotine metabolite ratio.
Psychiatric Exclusion Criteria (as determined by self report & MINI)
Medication Exclusion Criteria
Current use or recent discontinuation (within the last 14-days) of:
Current use of:
Daily use of:
General Exclusion
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
1,246 participants in 6 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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