RATIONALE: Stop-smoking plans, including counseling and nicotine replacement therapy, may help smokers quit smoking. It is not yet known whether counseling and the nicotine lozenge is more effective than counseling and the nicotine patch in helping adult smokers quit smoking. PURPOSE: This randomized phase III trial is studying counseling and the nicotine lozenge to see how well they work compared to counseling and the nicotine patch in helping smokers quit smoking.
OBJECTIVES: Primary * Compare the efficacy of behavioral counseling and nicotine-replacement therapy with either oral nicotine lozenge (NL) or transdermal nicotine patch (NP), in terms of promoting rates of smoking cessation (e.g., continued abstinence), in adult smokers. * Examine the degree to which nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) preference, desire to control NRT dosing, irregular smoking schedules, and desire for oral preoccupation moderates the relative efficacy of NL vs NP in promoting smoking cessation. * Evaluate the impact of the NL on mediators of smoking cessation (i.e., reduced craving, diminished withdrawal symptoms, cue reactivity, and increased perceived control over withdrawal symptoms). Secondary * Compare the rate of compliance with NRT across the 2 treatment arms and examine if compliance rate mediates the effects of NRT on quit rates. * Examine the potential role of genes related to nicotine dependence such as genes related to nicotine metabolism enzymes (e.g., CYP1A1) or genes related to dopamine concentrations (e.g., DRD2). OUTLINE: This is a randomized, open-label, multicenter study. Participants are stratified according to study center. Participants are randomized to 1 of 2 intervention arms. All participants undergo smoking cessation counseling in weeks 1, 3, 5, 7, and 9. Beginning in week 3, participants are asked to quit smoking for 12 weeks (weeks 3-14). * Arm I: Participants apply a transdermal nicotine patch at 3 different time periods during weeks 3-14; a higher-dose patch is applied for weeks 3-8, a medium-dose patch is applied for weeks 9-10, and a lower-dose patch is applied for weeks 11-14. * Arm II: Participants receive one oral nicotine lozenge every 1-2 hours in weeks 3-8 (≥ 9 lozenges per day), one lozenge every 2-4 hours in weeks 9-11 (≥ 5 lozenges per day), and 1 lozenge every 4-8 hours in weeks 12-14 (≥ 3 lozenges per day). The moderating variables (e.g., nicotine replacement-therapy \[NRT\] preference and the smoker's desire to control NRT dosing) are assessed at baseline. The mediating variables (i.e., reduced craving, diminished withdrawal symptoms, cue reactivity, and increased perceived control over withdrawal symptoms) are assessed at baseline and then at weeks 5, 7, 9, within weeks 14-16, and within weeks 26-28. Continuous abstinence will be measured at week 27. PROJECTED ACCRUAL: A total of 700 participants will be accrued for this study.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
642
nicotine lozenge
transdermal nicotine patch
Howard University Cancer Center
Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States
CCOP - Mount Sinai Medical Center
Miami Beach, Florida, United States
Medical College of Georgia Cancer Center
Augusta, Georgia, United States
Fox Chase Virtua Health Cancer Program at Virtua Memorial Hospital Burlington County
Mount Holly, New Jersey, United States
Hematology Oncology Associates of Central New York, PC - Northeast Center
East Syracuse, New York, United States
Don Monti Comprehensive Cancer Center at North Shore University Hospital
Manhasset, New York, United States
Geisinger Cancer Institute at Geisinger Health
Danville, Pennsylvania, United States
Fox Chase Cancer Center - Philadelphia
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
CCOP - Main Line Health
Wynnewood, Pennsylvania, United States
Nashville General Hospital at Meharry
Nashville, Tennessee, United States
24-hour Point Prevalence Abstinence at the 6-month Follow up
Time frame: 6-months
Rate of Compliance During the First 2 Weeks
Applied to use of the intervention (number of lozenges/day or number of patches used per week) not considering abstinence
Time frame: 2 weeks
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.