Improving Functional Outcomes of Veterans With PTSD and Tobacco Dependence
TobaccoPosttraumatic Stress DisorderVeterans with PTSD have high rates of smoking (34%-86% vs. 18% in the general population) and have substantial difficulties with quitting tobacco. Despite the significant morbidity and mortality associated with smoking, no smoking cessation treatments exist that intensively target PTSD symptoms as an obstacle to quit smoking, although this is a significant barrier to quitting for many Veterans. In addition, no smoking cessation treatments have a large emphasis on improving the functioning of Veterans with PTSD and tobacco dependence, although both PTSD and tobacco use negatively affect functioning across physical, mental health, and social domains. The goal of this SPiRE project is to evaluate Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for Veterans with PTSD and Tobacco Use (ACT-PT), which is an acceptance and mindfulness-based smoking cessation treatment for Veterans with PTSD and tobacco dependence. ACT-PT specifically targets smoking cravings related to PTSD symptoms and memories of trauma, in addition to difficulties managing PTSD symptoms. negative affect and nicotine withdrawal symptoms during quit attempts. ACT-PT includes structured intervention components that guide Veterans to replace smoking as a coping strategy for PTSD symptoms and memories with alternative coping strategies (e.g., mindfulness, acceptance). And healthy living activities (e.g., engaging in work, expanding social networks, engaging in physical exercise) that are consistent with Veterans' values. This project involves a small randomized clinical trial study of Veteran smokers with PTSD and tobacco dependence randomized to one of two different types of psychosocial treatment: ACT-PT versus the American Lung Association's Freedom From Smoking Program [FFS]. This study has two primary aims: 1) evaluate the relative feasibility and acceptability of the two interventions (including ease of recruitment, randomization proportion, staff and Veteran acceptance of the treatment, retention rates, treatment adherence, fidelity, ease of the assessment process), and 2) evaluate the preliminary efficacy of ACT-PT vs. FFS with the primary outcomes of tobacco use, PTSD symptoms, health-related quality of life, and functional impairment.
N-acetylcysteine for Tobacco Use Disorder
Nicotine DependenceSmokingThe purpose of this study is to assess the effects of administering N-Acetylcysteine (NAC) to assist in initial cessation and/or relapse prevention in adult cigarette smokers.
Social and Monetary Incentives for Smoking Cessation at Large Employers
Tobacco Use DisorderThe investigators will conduct a cluster randomized controlled trial of several behavioral interventions for smoking cessation among a sample of employees at large workplaces in the Bangkok metropolitan area. The study aims to test the impacts of different incentive structures for smoking cessation on take-up, effectiveness, and cost-effectiveness. The interventions are designed to elucidate certain principles from the field of behavioral economics.
The END Perioperative Smoking Pilot Study
SmokingNicotine Addiction1 moreThe purpose of this pilot randomized trial is to determine the feasibility of e-cigarettes and telephone counselling (compared to transdermal nicotine replacement and telephone counselling) as a harm-reduction tool that may lead to increased smoking cessation in the perioperative setting in smokers presenting for elective surgery at the San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center. Secondary outcomes include acceptability of e-cigarettes over transdermal nicotine replacement, length-of-stay in the post-anesthesia care unit, hospital length-of-stay, postoperative complications within the first 30-days, and smoking status 8-weeks after randomization. This pilot study is designed to provide the preliminary data necessary to plan and fund a larger-scale randomized clinical trial that will assess the utility of e-cigarettes in achieving smoking cessation perioperatively. Our ultimate goal is to add to the limited existing data on the safety and efficacy of e-cigarette use in smoking cessation, specifically in the perioperative setting where the risks of continued smoking are great and the motivation to stop is high.
Optimizing Tobacco Dependence Treatment in the Emergency Department
Tobacco Use DisorderThe investigators propose an innovative full-factorial design in a cohort of 1056 adult smokers in an urban emergency department (ED), to test the efficacy of four key intervention components: motivational interviewing, medication, quitline referral, and texting. At the trial's completion, a mixed-methods approach will be used to identify the components that were efficacious within the proposed cost constraint, along with feasibility and acceptability to providers and subjects. The investigators will then assemble an intervention that maximizes efficacy, given a cost-effectiveness constraint and findings from a qualitative analysis.
Smoking Cessation Treatment for Depressed Smokers
Tobacco Use DisorderThe present research project aims to develop an innovative and empirically validated intervention protocol for smoking cessation among patients with depressive symptoms. For this purpose, two smoking cessation treatments tailored for managing depression will be compared with a standard smoking cessation treatment. Participants will be assigned to one of the following three treatment conditions: 1) Cognitive-behavioral treatment for smoking cessation (CBT); 2) CBT plus Behavioral Activation (BA); 3) CBT+BA+ Contingency Management (CM). The main goals are: 1. To assess abstinence rates in each of the above-mentioned treatment conditions conditions at short and long-term follow-ups: post-treatment, once during the first three months, and at at six after post-treatment. 1. To assess the effectiveness (relapse rate) of each treatment condition at short and long-term follow-ups: post-treatment, once during the first three months,and at six after post-treatment. 3. To analyze efficiency (cost-efficacy) and feasibility of the treatments to a community setting. 4. To analyze the moderating effect of individual variables over treatment outcomes. In particular, moderating variables will be: sociodemographic characteristics, severity of nicotine dependence, severity of depressive symptomatology and impulsivity. The study hypothesis are: 1-Adding a voucher-based CM component to CBT+BA will enhance abstinence rates and decrease both short and long-term relapse rates. 2. Providing smoking cessation treatments that include a mood management component (BA or BA+CM) will have a positive impact in ameliorating depression. 3. Certain individual variables (e.g., gender, nicotine dependence and depression severity and impulsivity) will have a moderating effect on treatment outcomes. 4. Both CBT+BA and CBT+BA+CM will prove cost-effectiveness and thus may be generalized to a clinical and community context.
UW Quitting Using Intensive Treatment Study (QUITS)
Tobacco DependenceThis research will determine whether two highly promising modifications to varenicline treatment (i.e. use of a nicotine patch adjuvant and extended 24-week duration) produce superior smoking outcomes when they are either used together or alone. Despite their promise, the proposed modifications have never been experimentally evaluated relative to standard varenicline pharmacotherapy. Thus, this innovative research will produce novel evidence regarding how best to help smokers quit, and thereby address the leading cause of preventable mortality and morbidity related to cardiovascular and pulmonary diseases.
Study on Sit to Quit Phone Intervention
Nicotine DependenceThis study is designed to test the effectiveness of the smoking cessation intervention "Sit to Quit" through a randomized-control trial. This study will compare abstinence outcomes in the Sit to Quit study group to a control group using the North Carolina State Tobacco Quit Line.
Comparing NicoBloc to Nicotine Lozenges
Smoking CessationNicotine DependenceTo examine the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary impact of using NicoBloc compared to nicotine lozenges
To Assess the Bioequivalence of the 4mg Prototype Mini Nicotine Lozenge to the Reference Product...
Tobacco Use DisorderThis study will assess the bioequivalence of the test product (Nicotine Prototype Mini lozenge 4 milligrams [mg]) to a commercial reference product (nicotine polacrilex mini lozenge 4mg) in healthy smokers under fasting conditions.