| City: |
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Boston |
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State:
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MA |
| Zip Code: |
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02114 |
| Conditions: |
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Schizophrenia - Schizoaffective Disorder - Smoking |
| Purpose: |
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Varenicline (Chantix) is a smoking cessation treatment that was approved in 2006 by the FDA
for treatment of nicotine dependence and may be particularly beneficial in smokers with
schizophrenia. Early experience with varenicline indicates that it will be effective for
smoking cessation in schizophrenia and in addition, has the potential to be therapeutic for
cognitive dysfunction in this population.
To assess this possibility, we will evaluate the safety and efficacy of 12 months of
varenicline in schizophrenia patients who are able to quit smoking in the short term with
this treatment. To do so, we will enroll 274 smokers with schizophrenia from 4 mental health
clinics in Massachusetts and New Hampshire into an open, 12-week smoking cessation program
that includes varenicline added to weekly group cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT). Those
who achieve at least 2 weeks of continuous abstinence during the last 4 weeks of the open
intervention will be randomized to the relapse prevention phase: a 40-week, double blind,
placebo-controlled trial of varenicline at the dose used to quit smoking added to a tapering
CBT schedule. Participants will then discontinue study medications and behavioral treatment
and enter a 3-month follow up phase.
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| Study summary: |
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Participants will be moderate to heavy smokers, aged 18-70, who have smoked an average of
≥10 cigarettes/day for the past year and who have not quit during the past year for a period
>1 month.
During a 12-week open phase smoking cessation program, eligible subjects will be given
active varenicline in addition to a 13-session weekly cognitive behavioral therapy program
for smoking cessation. Dr. Evins (Principal Investigator) or a co-investigator will meet
with subjects individually at Baseline of the Smoking Cessation Program to assess their
medical eligibility for varenicline. A chart review will also be conducted by a research
physician or psychiatrist.
Dr. Evins or another prescribing co-investigator will write a prescription for varenicline
for each medically eligible subject. Subjects will receive their study medication at the end
of each weekly group meeting. Any subject who experiences a serious side effect to the
medication will meet with Dr. Evins or another medical co-investigator individually.
Subjects will set quit dates between the fourth and fifth CBT session weeks. Self-reports
and exhaled carbon monoxide (CO) levels will be used to assess smoking status. Those
subjects who have been abstinent for ≥2 weeks at the end of the 12th session group will be
eligible for a 40-week relapse prevention program. After enrolling in the Relapse Prevention
Program, subjects will be randomized to receive varenicline or placebos in addition to CBT
for relapse prevention.
At Week 12 (the week before the end of the Smoking Cessation Program), Dr. Evins or another
prescribing co-investigator will write prescriptions for subjects eligible for the
randomized Relapse Prevention phase (i.e. successful quitters); these prescriptions will be
sent to the Massachusetts General Hospital Research Pharmacy, where they will be filled
according to the randomization code that the a research pharmacist will create.
When subjects come for the CBT orientation group session of the Relapse Prevention Program
(Week 13), they will receive a 1-month supply of varenicline or placebo pill. During this
randomized Relapse Prevention phase, medication compliance will be assessed at every group
meeting by pill-count. Subjects will be asked about medication compliance and side effects
at each group by the CBT group leaders and staff.
Any subject who experiences a serious side effect to the medication will meet with Dr. Evins
or another medical co-investigator individually. In addition, Dr. Evins or a medical
co-investigator will review the adverse events forms for each subject every week. Again,
self-report and CO levels will be used to monitor smoking status.
Before and during both the open and randomized relapse prevention phases, subjects will be
periodically assessed for cognitive performance, clinical characteristics, and adverse
events in order to evaluate effects of withdrawal, predictors of cessation and relapse, and
medication side effects. Following the completion of the 40-week relapse prevention phase, 3
follow-up assessments will be performed over a 3-month period to evaluate smoking status,
cognitive functioning, and clinical effects. |
| Criteria: |
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Inclusion Criteria:
- Women and men aged 18-70
- DSM-IV diagnosis of schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder by diagnostic interview
and chart review
- Smoke at least 10 cigarettes per day
- Clinically stable, on a stable dose of antipsychotic medication for at least 1 month
- No current active suicidal ideation
- Expired air carbon monoxide (CO) concentration >9 ppm
- Willing to take study medications and set a quit date within 2-3 weeks of beginning
treatment and be willing to participate in the relapse prevention and follow-up
portions of the study
- Women of childbearing potential must have a negative urine pregnancy test at baseline
and agree to use an approved form of contraception during the study.
Exclusion Criteria:
- DSM-IV diagnosis of dementia, neurodegenerative disease, or other organic mental
disorder
- Substance use disorder other than nicotine or caffeine in the last 6 months
- Major depressive disorder within the last 6 months
- Serious unstable medical illness including, cardiovascular, hepatic, renal,
respiratory, endocrine, neurological, or hematological disease such that
hospitalization for treatment of that illness is likely within the next 2 months
- Life-threatening arrhythmia or cerebro-vascular event within 6 months, cardiovascular
event within 2 months or uncontrolled hypertension
- History of multiple head injuries with neurological sequelae, a single severe head
injury with lasting neurological sequelae, or current CNS tumor
- Liver function tests elevated over twice normal
- Renal insufficiency with estimated creatinine clearance <40 ml/min
- Plan to continue use of tobacco products othe than cigarettes (e.g., cigar, pipe)
- Use of an investigational medication or device in the past 30 days
- Current suicidal or homicidal ideation |
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If you are interested in this clinical trial please use the contact information above. If you would like to get additional information about this clinical trial please visit ClinicalTrials.gov.
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| Data Source: |
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ClinicalTrials.gov |
| Date Processed: |
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October 22, 2010 |
Modifications to
this listing: |
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Only selected fields are shown, please use the link
above to view all information about this clinical trial. |
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