Effects of Contingency Management and Nicotine Replacement Therapy on Youth Smoking
Status:
Completed
Trial end date:
2016-01-01
Target enrollment:
Participant gender:
Summary
Cigarette smoking is an important public health concern, and it is most often initiated in
adolescence. Despite substantial research on smoking cessation in adults, however, relatively
little effort has focused on therapeutic approaches to reduce adolescent smoking.
Behavioral interventions, such as contingency management (CM), and pharmacotherapies, such as
nicotine replacement therapy (NRT), each have some efficacy in reducing adolescent smoking,
and in adults, combination of behavioral and pharmacological approaches is more effective in
reducing smoking than either one alone. Little is known about combining these therapeutic
approaches in adolescent smokers, and research in this area has been hindered, in part, by
the expense and complexity of large-scale clinical trials of the combined treatments and the
relative dearth of a cost-effective laboratory procedure. Developing and validating a
laboratory model to evaluate the combined effects of CM and pharmacological adjuncts for
adolescent smoking is important because such studies can be conducted more rapidly and
efficiently, and could provide information on the optimal conditions (e.g., dose) under which
pharmacotherapies might augment the positive effects of CM.
The investigators propose to conduct a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind,
between-groups, 2-week laboratory study. Participants will be randomly assigned to one of the
following four groups: CM+nicotine patches, CM+placebo patches, noncontingent control
(NC)+nicotine patches and NC+placebo patches. Fifteen participants will be enrolled in each
of the four groups, totaling 60 participants. On day 1, participants will arrive to the
laboratory for a 1-h session. During this session, breath carbon monoxide (CO) levels, saliva
or urinary cotinine levels will be evaluated. Participants will also complete questionnaires
on craving, withdrawal and cigarette dependence. Participants will then receive seven
patches, to wear for seven days, one patch daily. Five sessions during the days 8 to 12 will
serve as CM or noncontingent sessions, and participants will continue wearing patch daily. On
these sessions, breath CO levels will be evaluated, and participants will have opportunity to
receive payments based on their CO levels, according to the group assignment. If successful,
the proposed study will provide a human laboratory model for use in studies of the combined
CM and pharmacological approaches for modifying adolescent smoking behavior.