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UnknownNCT00906386

Methadone Maintenance Treatment and Smoking Cessation

An Examination of the Efficacy, Safety, and Gender Differences in Using Varenicline as an Aid to Smoking Cessation in a Population of Methadone Maintained Opioid Dependent Patients (Pilot Trial)

Status
Unknown
Phase
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
112 (estimated)
Sponsor
Vancouver Coastal Health · Other Government
Sex
All
Age
19 Years – 75 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The main hypotheses guiding the study are: 1. Stable methadone maintenance patients receiving varenicline will be more likely to maintain abstinence than patients receiving placebo 2. There will be no differences in the type and number of symptoms reported between stable methadone maintenance patients receiving varenicline and placebo 3. There will be no changes in methadone dosage between abstinent and non-abstinent smokers 4. There will be no differences in efficacy, withdrawal symptoms, and safety of varenicline between male and female participants

Detailed description

1. PURPOSE: The purpose of this placebo controlled study is to determine the efficacy, safety, and gender differences in using varenicline for smoking cessation in a population of stable methadone maintenance patients being treated for Opioid Dependence. 2. HYPOTHESIS: 1.Stable methadone maintenance patients receiving varenicline will be more likely to maintain abstinence than patients receiving placebo 2.There will be no differences in the type and number of symptoms reported between stable methadone maintenance patients receiving varenicline and placebo 3.There will be no changes in methadone dosage between abstinent and non-abstinent smokers 4.There will be no differences in efficacy, withdrawal symptoms, and safety of varenicline between male and female participants 3\. JUSTIFICATION: Patients on methadone maintenance treatment have smoking prevalence rates of up 80-90% and consequently disproportionately high mortality compared to the general population. A majority of these patients express a desire to quit but are generally more heavily dependent on nicotine. Randomized controlled trials in non-drug using populations have shown varenicline to be more efficacious for smoking cessation than placebo and other smoking cessation medications. This placebo controlled research protocol will examine varenicline's effect on smoking cessation/reduction and potential sex and gender differences in a population of methadone maintained patients. 4\. OBJECTIVES: Primary outcome: * Continuous abstinence from smoking during the last 4 weeks of treatment (weeks 9-12). Secondary outcomes: * 7-day point prevalence of abstinence * Continuous abstinence Weeks 9-26 * Sex and gender differences * Psychological assessment (Beck Depression Inventory) * Adverse effects (Nausea, Dry mouth, Flatulence, Constipation, Insomnia, -Abnormal dreams, Irritability, Sleep disorder, Headaches, Dizziness e.t.c.) 5\. RESEARCH METHOD: This pilot randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial will be conducted at Vancouver Coastal Health Tobacco Dependence Clinic Vancouver, BC with a 12-week treatment period and follow-up of smoking status to week 26. The intervention will include the use of Varenicline titrated to 1 mg twice daily or placebo for 12 weeks, plus weekly brief smoking cessation counseling. 6\. All significance tests will be 2-tailed with an overall level of significance of a = 0.05. The primary outcome will be the analysis of continuous abstinence using a logistic regression model. The secondary outcomes will be: 1. the analysis of 7-day abstinence and 9-26 week continuous abstinence using logistic regression analysis. 2. Minnesota Nicotine Withdrawal Scale, Beck's Depression Inventory, and changes in methadone dose outcome using repeated measures analysis, and 3. Chi-square tests and t-tests (or Mann-Whitney U) to determine sex and gender differences (male vs female) as well as differences in adverse effects of treatment (varenicline vs placebo)

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGVareniclineoral, 1 mg twice daily, 12 weeks
DRUGplacebooral, 1 mg twice daily, 12 weeks

Timeline

Start date
2009-05-01
Primary completion
2009-10-01
Completion
2011-02-01
First posted
2009-05-21
Last updated
2010-03-02

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00906386. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.