The proposed clinical studies will analyze the interactions between progesterone, nicotine, fMRI measures of patterns of brain activity, covariance with endocrine hormones, mood and cardiovascular measures. It is hypothesized that the administration of progesterone at a dose that mimics luteal phase levels in normal cycling women will diminish the positive subjective effects of nicotine, as has been consistently observed for cocaine. This novel approach could have direct implications for facilitating smoking cessation treatment in women of reproductive age
These clinical studies will examine the effects of progesterone on the acute effects of IV nicotine and on patterns of brain activation in areas of the brain with high levels of nicotine receptors. This will be correlated with serum nicotine levels, nicotine-induced changes in subjective states, and endocrine measures of the HPA and HPG axes. The temporal covariance of progesterone's effects on serum nicotine levels and nicotine-induced changes in subjective states and cardiovascular measures will be analyzed. The covariance between the effects of progesterone on nicotine-induced changes in BOLD fMRI, endocrine, subjective and cardiovascular effects and the temporal concordance with increases in serum nicotine and cotinine levels will be determined.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
DOUBLE
Subjects will be given an IV challenge dose of nicotine or placebo in a constant volume of 2 mL on any study day. The nicotine solution (1.0 mg/70kg or 1.5 mg/70kg or 2.0 mg/70kg) will be administered over 1 min. This rate of drug delivery (2 mL over one minute) has been safe in our IRB-approved studies of nicotine. Most investigators have administered nicotine over 10 seconds without any adverse reactions. We concur with the IRB recommendation that the lower doses (1.0 mg/70kg and 1.5 mg/70 kg) will be administered first and the higher dose (2.0 mg/70kg) will be administered last.
To stimulate the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle, Prometrium capsules containing 200 mg of micronized progesterone or placebo (lactose containing) capsules will be administered orally at 120 minutes before the injection of IV nicotine.
Alcohol and Drug Abuse Research Center at McLean Hospital
Belmont, Massachusetts, United States
Effect of progesterone on IV nicotine, hormones and subjective ratings
We are examining the effects of progesterone on the acute effects of IV nicotine and BOLD signal active in areas of the brain with high levels of nicotine receptors. Correlational analyses between brain activation patterns, serum nicotine levels, serum/plasma hormone levels, and nicotine-induced changes in subjective statues, as measured by a visual analog scale, are being evaluated.
Time frame: From baseline to study completion (approximately 8 months for males and 2 years for females)
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