Smoking during pregnancy is an important modifiable cause of poor pregnancy outcomes. Even with augmented behavioral interventions, smoking cessation rates in pregnancy trials rarely exceed 20%. These low quit rates may be due to inadequate treatment of the physical dependence on nicotine. Indeed, medications, which may help to reduce nicotine withdrawal symptoms, are a first-line treatment for smoking treatment in non-pregnant smokers. However, little information is available on the safety or efficacy of medications to treat pregnant smokers. The purpose of this trial is to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of 2 mg nicotine gum in promoting smoking cessation during pregnancy. The design is a randomized, placebo controlled trial where subjects are randomized to nicotine gum (6 weeks ad libitum use followed by a 6 week taper) or a matching placebo. Women who are doing well at the end of the trial will also be offered gum post-partum for relapse prevention.
This proposal will examine the utility of one first-line medication, nicotine gum, as an aid to smoking cessation during pregnancy. The specific aims are: * (1) To compare smoking cessation rates and smoking reduction among pregnant smokers who are randomized to receive nicotine gum (2 mg dose) or a matching placebo; * (2) To compare nicotine gum versus placebo on surrogate measures of maternal and fetal safety (i.e., overall nicotine and tobacco exposure at 6 weeks after the quit date and at 32-34 weeks gestation) and birth weight at the time of delivery; * (3) To examine which subjects benefit the most from the use of nicotine gum for smoking cessation during pregnancy. Subjects will be recruited from prenatal clinics that serve primarily a low-income, minority population. Two hundred sixty-eight pregnant smokers will be randomly assigned to receive smoking cessation behavioral counseling and either a 6-week course of mint flavored placebo or nicotine gum, followed by 6 weeks of decreasing doses. Maternal blood for genotyping will be obtained at study entry. Primary outcome measures will be 7-day point prevalence of cigarette abstinence, number of cigarettes smoked per day, urinary cotinine concentrations, and measures of tobacco exposure (i.e., carbon monoxide in exhaled air and urine anabasine and anatabine) at 6 weeks after the quit date and at 32-34 weeks gestation, and infant birth weight. We hypothesize that: * (1) Pregnant smokers who are randomized to nicotine gum will have double the quit rates and will reduce their smoking to a greater degree than subjects randomized to placebo; * (2) Nicotine gum compared to placebo will reduce maternal levels of tobacco-exposure markers and increase birth weights in the offspring; * (3) The odds of cigarette abstinence will be increased primarily in subjects who smoke at least 15 cigarettes per day.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
250
University of Connecticut Health Center
Farmington, Connecticut, United States
Hartford Hospital
Hartford, Connecticut, United States
The Hospital of Central Connecticut
New Britain, Connecticut, United States
Baystate Medical Center
Springfield, Massachusetts, United States
Biochemically validated quit rates
Time frame: 6 weeks after treatment, end of pregnancy
tobacco exposure measurements
Time frame: 6 weeks after treatment, end of pregnancy
birth weight
Time frame: time of delivery
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