The purpose of this study is to test the safety, tolerability, compliance and efficacy of two different forms of nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) (the nicotine transdermal patch and the nicotine gum) in a nicotine-dependent adolescent population.
We hypothesize that two nicotine replacement delivery systems (patch and gum) are both safe and efficacious for the treatment of adolescent nicotine dependence. Consequently, use of both the patch and gum should be tolerable in this population with only minor adverse side-effects. Secondly, some individuals in both groups (patch, gum) may benefit from either cessation or reduction in smoke exposure, as a result of the distinctly different mechanisms of the two treatments (steady state vs. intermittent delivery of NRT). A.The primary objectives of this study are: 1. to evaluate the comparative safety of the nicotine transdermal system (21 mg "patch") and the nicotine gum (2 mg and 4 mg), dosed appropriately to pre-treatment levels of smoking, to initiate and sustain smoking cessation and reduction ; 2. to compare compliance levels with the patch and gum; 3. to evaluate the comparative efficacy of the patch and the gum to initiate and sustain smoking cessation and reduction; 4. to compare the rates of biochemically-verified continuous abstinence by using intent-to-treat analysis based on individual subject outcome. B.The secondary objectives of this study are: 1. to correlate pre-treatment nicotine exposure (saliva cotinine) with withdrawal intensity measured in all groups during treatment and with treatment outcome; 2. to compare biological markers of smoke exposure (expired air CO and saliva thiocyanate) with self-reports of smoking and to correlate them with withdrawal symptomatology and treatment outcome; 3. to obtain smoking topography data (puff volume, velocity of intake, interpuff interval, and puffs per cigarette) on adolescent patterns of smoking as an index of smoking intensity and exposure and to correlate pre-treatment smoking intensity with treatment outcome. C.The tertiary objectives are: 1. to examine the validity of the use of biochemical markers of smoke exposure (expired air CO and saliva thiocyanate) as potential markers of smoking cessation in adolescents; 2. to compare the relative cotinine exposure of adolescents who are smoking with those who are receiving nicotine replacement who do and do not successfully quit
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
157
Teen Tobacco Addiction Research Clinic
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
a)Safety will be tabulated as a function of reported and observed adverse side-effects.
b)Tolerability and Compliance by attendance at visits, completeness of smoking cessation diaries, saliva cotinine, and correlations of biologic markers (expired air CO and saliva thiocyanate) with smoking cessation diaries.
c) Efficacy by Minnesota Withdrawal scale, craving visual analog scales and Questionnaire of Smoking Urges, smoking abstinence/reduction (as per self-reported data in smoking cessation diaries), expired air CO and saliva thiocyanate.
d) Weight and body mass index (BMI)
e)Cognitive performance tests
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