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Very Low-Nicotine Cigarettes in Smokers With SUD (VLNC)

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Brown University

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 2

Conditions

Nicotine Dependence

Treatments

Behavioral: behavioral counseling for smoking cessation
Drug: Nicotine

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01989507
R01DA034628-01A1

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this study is to determine the efficacy, acceptability and unintended consequences of very low nicotine content cigarettes (VLNCC) in smokers with current or past year substance use disorders (SUD). The primary aim of this study is to determine whether 6 weeks of VLNCC compared to normal nicotine content cigarettes (NNCC) will result in more smoking cessation over 6 months and reduce cigarette use, cotinine, and biomarkers of toxicity. We will also assess the effects of VLNCC versus NNCC cigarettes on frequency of substance use and substance cravings (drugs and alcohol) because this is relevant to the safety of these products among smokers with SUD. Secondary aims are to study effects on cigarette craving, nicotine withdrawal and dependence, and depressed mood. Methods: Random assignment to VLNCC versus NNCC of up to 312 smokers with SUD will be balanced by gender, degree of tobacco dependence, and recent drug and alcohol use. All smokers will be provided with smoking counseling. Assessments over 6 months will assess effects both during the 6 weeks of using research cigarettes and after return to usual cigarettes. The importance is in determining the viability and safety of this public health strategy in terms of effects on both smoking and other substance use in a highly addicted population, which is essential to determine before the FDA implements this policy.

Full description

The 2009 passage of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act (FSPTCA) gave the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) the authority to reduce levels of nicotine in cigarettes if appropriate for public health. This project addresses an area targeted for study by NIH and the FDA to assess the impact of products with reduced toxicity on tobacco use behaviors. Very-low nicotine content cigarettes (VLNCC) have been shown in some studies with smokers from the general population to reduce craving and withdrawal for tobacco relative to abstinence with little or no compensatory smoking, suggesting that a mandated reduction in the nicotine yield of cigarettes could substantially reduce smoking rates. This may be a particularly effective method of reducing smoking and smoking-related disease in special populations that have very high rates of tobacco dependence, such as people with substance use disorders (SUD). However, the consequences of this policy for smokers with SUD have not been investigated, and a call has gone out for studies of the safety of these products with vulnerable populations such as these. The purpose of this study is to determine the efficacy, acceptability and unintended consequences of VLNCC in smokers with SUD (current or past year) currently abstinent from hard drugs. The primary aims are to determine whether VLNCC will increase smoking cessation and reduce cigarette use, cotinine, and biomarkers of toxicity in smokers with SUD relative to baseline and to those randomized to a normal nicotine content cigarette (NNCC), and to determine any unintended effects of VLNCC on substance use and cravings to use substances so as to investigate safety. Secondary aims are to study effects on cigarette craving and nicotine withdrawal and dependence (mechanisms), and state depression (safety). A 2-group between-group by pre-post design will compare 6 weeks of VLNCC to NNCC; all smokers will also be provided with smoking counseling. Follow-up over 6 months will assess effects after return to usual cigarettes. The importance is in determining the viability and safety of this public health strategy in terms of effects on both smoking and other substance use in a highly addicted population, which is essential to determine before the FDA implements this policy.

Enrollment

250 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 75 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria::

  • Diagnostic and Statistical Manual-5 criteria for current or past year substance use disorder
  • smoke 10+ cigarettes/day for past 6 months
  • zero breath alcohol, negative urine drug tests and a self-report of no drug use in the past 30 days on day of informed consent
  • score of 4-8 on the Contemplation Ladder (individuals interested in quitting smoking someday and/or have thought about quitting)

Exclusion Criteria:

  • active psychosis as evidenced by hallucinations or delusions
  • actively quitting smoking or current use of any nicotine replacement or other smoking cessation treatment
  • medication contraindications for smoking cessation (smoking cessation may change the bioavailability of antipsychotics, warfarin, theophylline and insulin)
  • other medications that could affect smoking (naltrexone, buprenorphine, acamprosate, anti-seizure medications, disulfiram)
  • if on psychotropic medications, not stabilized on psychotropic medications (i.e., anti-depressant, anti-anxiety or anti-manic medications changed within past 4 weeks)
  • inability to understand informed consent in a test (true-false questions) on the key elements of the consent form

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Quadruple Blind

250 participants in 2 patient groups

Very low nicotine content cigarettes
Experimental group
Description:
Cigarettes with Nicotine Yield 0.07 ± 0.02
Treatment:
Behavioral: behavioral counseling for smoking cessation
Drug: Nicotine
Conventional nicotine content cigarettes
Active Comparator group
Description:
Cigarettes with Nicotine Yield 0.8 ± 0.15
Treatment:
Behavioral: behavioral counseling for smoking cessation
Drug: Nicotine

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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