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Active clinical trials for "Tobacco Use Disorder"

Results 811-820 of 859

Brain Activity and Smoking Cessation

Nicotine Dependence

In the current study, the investigators propose to test: (1) whether brain activation and connectivity in a resting state, assessed by ASL perfusion MRI, BOLD fMRI, and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) predicts smoking relapse, and (2) whether brain activation, assessed by BOLD fMRI during performance of neurobehavioral probes for executive cognitive function, stress and cue reactivity, predicts smoking relapse.

Completed50 enrollment criteria

Enhanced Quitline Intervention in Smoking Cessation for Patients With Non-Metastatic Lung Cancer...

Limited Stage Small Cell Lung CancerRecurrent Small Cell Lung Cancer7 more

This randomized clinical trial studies enhanced quitline intervention in smoking cessation for patients with non-metastatic lung cancer. Stop-smoking plans suggested by doctors may help patients with early-stage cancer quit smoking

Completed4 enrollment criteria

Screening Methods in Finding Lung Cancer Early in Current or Former Smokers

Lung CancerTobacco Use Disorder

RATIONALE: Screening may help doctors find lung cancer sooner, when it may be easier to treat. PURPOSE: This clinical trial is studying screening methods to see how well they find lung cancer early in current or former smokers.

Unknown status21 enrollment criteria

Effects of Smoking Cues on Tobacco Craving Responses and the Reinforcing Efficacy of Cigarettes...

Nicotine Dependence

Background: Multiple social, psychological, and environmental factors contribute to adolescents' use of cigarettes. Environmental smoking cues have been shown to play an important role in the maintenance of nicotine addiction and in relapse to smoking. However, few studies have examined craving and cue-reactivity in adolescent smokers, even though craving appears to contribute to ongoing smoking and relapse in this age group. Another factor central to addiction is the rewarding effect of drugs, or the interaction between the person, the drug, and the environmental setting. However, more research is needed on whether environmental cues lead to increased smoking in adolescents. Objectives: - To determine the effects of smoking versus neutral cues in adolescents who smoke on (1) craving, mood, and autonomic responsivity and (2) the relative reinforcing efficacy of tobacco cigarettes. Eligibility: - Adolescents 12 to 17 years of age who are current smokers (at least five cigarettes per day for the past 6 months). Design: This study will involve three study visits. Participants will be allowed to smoke before all study sessions and will give a breath carbon monoxide (CO) sample before all sessions. Participants must not use any illicit drugs or alcohol 24 hours before sessions. Visit 1 (baseline session): Participants will provide a urine sample and will be familiarized with the study room and session design. Visits 2 and 3: Participants will be connected to physiological recording devices to measure heart rate, perspiration, and other physical responses. After baseline readings, participants will be exposed to smoking cues at one experimental session and to neutral cues at the other experimental session. Before, during, and after cue presentation, participants will complete self-report measures of mood and craving and have physiological measures taken. They will then be re-exposed to smoking or neutral cues and engage in a self-administration procedure to examine the effect of cues on the reinforcing efficacy of cigarettes.

Completed10 enrollment criteria

Standard Medical Care or Urgent Chest X-ray in Diagnosing Lung Cancer in Smokers With Chest Symptoms...

Lung CancerTobacco Use Disorder

RATIONALE: Diagnostic procedures, such as an urgent chest x-ray, may help in planning cancer treatment. It is not yet known whether standard medical care is more effective than an urgent x-ray in diagnosing lung cancer in smokers with chest symptoms who are older than 60 years. PURPOSE: This randomized clinical trial is studying standard medical care to see how well it works compared with an urgent chest x-ray in diagnosing lung cancer in smokers with chest symptoms who are older than 60 years.

Unknown status20 enrollment criteria

A Follow-up Study to Assess Long-term Immunogenicity and Safety of NicVAX/Placebo as an Aid to Smoking...

Smoking CessationNicotine Dependence

The purpose of the study is to obtain two year follow up data for subjects that received six vaccinations of NicVAX in prior phase III studies. No treatment will be administered. Anti-nicotine antibody levels and safety data will be collected.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Nicotine Vaccination and Nicotinic Receptor Occupancy

Nicotine Dependence

This is a molecular imaging research study designed to examine how much nicotine gets into the brain before and after vaccination with NicVAX, a nicotine vaccine developed by Nabi Biopharmaceuticals. NicVAX (Nicotine Conjugate Vaccine) is an investigational vaccine designed as an aid to smoking cessation and long-term abstinence, as well as an aid to prevent relapses of a treated smoker. In this project we want to understand the degree to which NicVAX administration changes how much nicotine enters the brain in smokers.

Completed10 enrollment criteria

Breath Carbon Monoxide and Cotinine as Biomarkers to Distinguish Smokers From Nonsmokers

Nicotine Dependence

Background: Self-report and biochemical verification are used to determine smoking status in treatment trials and clinical research. Each method has merits and limitations that make it appropriate for particular situations. Participants who feel social pressure to report tobacco abstinence may provide unreliable self-reporting results. Biochemical verification using breath carbon monoxide (CO) is a more reliable indicator, but several biological and environmental factors (including exposure to secondhand smoke) can affect the sensitivity and specificity of breath CO measurement. An ideal biomarker of smoking status is cotinine, the major metabolite of nicotine. Cotinine levels found in blood, urine, and saliva can be used to distinguish between smokers and nonsmokers, as well as between light and heavy smokers. Researchers are interested in using cotinine assessments to develop suitable breath CO cutoff levels to categorize different types of smokers and nonsmokers for use in future research. Objectives: - To determine a breath carbon monoxide (CO) cutoff level that optimally discriminates between heavy and light smokers and nonsmokers who are and who are not exposed to environmental tobacco smoke. Eligibility: Individuals between 18 and 64 years of age who fall into one of the following groups: current smokers reporting more than 10 cigarettes per day for at least 6 months current smokers reporting 10 or fewer cigarettes per day for at least 6 months nonsmokers reporting regular environmental exposure to tobacco smoke nonsmokers reporting limited or no exposure to tobacco smoke Design: The study will involve a single outpatient session. Participants will provide breath CO, urine, and saliva samples, and will complete several smoking-related questionnaires on smoking history, current craving levels, and perceived level of nicotine dependence.

Completed18 enrollment criteria

PET Imaging of Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptors

Healthy VolunteersNicotine Dependence1 more

Background: - Central nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) are the primary target for the action of nicotine. In addition to being involved in tobacco dependence, they are also involved in a variety of brain disorders, including Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases. Researchers are interested in developing better ways to study the action of nAChRs to improve treatments for smoking cessation and other problems affected by these receptors. These new study methods may involve different radiotracers, which are drugs that can help show brain activity during positron emission tomography (PET) scanning. Objectives: - To evaluate the feasibility of using a radiotracer, 2-[18F]F-A-85380, in PET scanning of the brain. Eligibility: - Healthy volunteers between 21 and 45 years of age who do not use tobacco. Design: Participants will be asked to avoid consuming alcohol or using a number of over-the-counter medications, including antihistamines, cough medicines, and nasal decongestants, for 5 days before the study day. Participants provide urine and breath samples at the start of the study to be tested for chemicals that may interfere with the study. Participants will visit the clinical center the morning of the day before the scanning session to provide blood and urine samples as required. Participants will return and be admitted for an overnight stay later that afternoon or evening. On the day of the study, participants will receive a single dose of the radiotracer 2-[18F]F-A-85380, and will have a series of PET scans over the next 7 hours and provide blood samples during that time. Participants will spend that night at the clinical center and leave on the morning after the end of the study. Participants will return for follow-up visits 2 weeks and 1 month after the end of the study.

Completed13 enrollment criteria

Epidemiology and Acute Oral Effects Electronic Cigarette

Nicotine DependenceCigarettes

Electronic cigarettes are battery-powered vaporizers which have a similar feel to tobacco smoking. They do not produce cigarette smoke but rather an aerosol, which is frequently referred to as vapor. E-cigarettes are marketed as less harmful alternatives to smoking. Use and awareness of these devices has grown exponentially in recent years, with millions of people currently using them. The benefits and risks of electronic cigarette use are uncertain. There is no research on the acute oral effects of electronic cigarette in the scientific literature and no hungarian epidemiological survey has been performed in this topic. Regulation of electronic cigarettes varies across countries in the European Union, ranging from no regulation to banning them entirely. The investigators research could help to integrate the regulation of this device in Hungary and in the EU as well. The measurement of acute oral effects of e-cigarette and a hungarian epidemiological survey would be novel in this topic.

Unknown status9 enrollment criteria
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