Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02245308

Abstinence Reinforcement Therapy (ART) for Homeless Veteran Smokers

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
133 (actual)
Sponsor
VA Office of Research and Development · Federal
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 70 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The goal of this research study is to examine the effects of a treatment for helping homeless veterans who smoke to stop smoking. Participants in the study will be assigned to one of two study groups. Participants in the first group will be referred to the local Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center's Smoking Cessation Clinic for treatment. Second group participants will receive a behavioral treatment designed to reward smokers for quitting and staying quit. These participants will also receive telephone counseling and medications for smoking cessation.

Detailed description

Cigarette smoking is the most lethal substance use disorder in the United States in terms of morbidity and mortality. Veterans who are homeless, along with those who have mental health or substance abuse problems, are at the highest risk for nicotine dependence. Prevalence estimates for smoking among homeless Veterans are 80%. Thus, homeless Veterans are at tremendous risk for smoking related morbidity and mortality. This information suggests that smoking needs to be targeted specifically among this high risk population of smokers. The addition of contingency management (CM) to existing evidence-based tele-health smoking cessation interventions is expected to be a cost-effective way to increase the reach of intensive smoking cessation treatment. CM is a behavioral therapy that provides positive reinforcers to individuals misusing substances contingent upon objective evidence of abstinence from substance use. Because CM requires verification of abstinence multiple times daily with a clinic-based carbon monoxide (CO) monitor, it has largely been relegated to inpatient and day treatment programs. The application of emerging smart phone technology, however, can overcome this barrier, and may be particularly well suited to homeless Veterans. The innovative smart phone application has made the use of CM for outpatient smoking cessation portable and feasible. The goal of this comparative effectiveness trial is to evaluate the effectiveness of a combined tele-health and mobile CM intervention that the investigators are calling Abstinence Reinforcement Therapy (ART). The investigators propose to screen 165 and randomize 126 homeless Veteran smokers to either: ABSTINENCE REINFORCEMENT THERAPY (ART), a tele-health intervention that combines guideline-based cognitive-behavioral telephone (CBT) counseling, a tele-medicine clinic for access to smoking cessation aids including choice of pharmacotherapy, and intensive behavioral therapy through mCM. VA SPECIALTY SMOKING CESSATION TREATMENT control, which includes all the elements associated with enrollment in a VA specialty smoking cessation clinic including group counseling, individual telephone counseling, self-help materials, and smoking cessation aids including choice of pharmacotherapy. Specific aims are to: AIM 1: Evaluate the impact of ART on rates of abstinence from cigarettes as measured by bio-verified, self-reported prolonged abstinence at post-treatment, and 3-month and 6-month post-randomization follow-ups. AIM 2: Evaluate the relative cost-effectiveness of the ART intervention in quality adjusted life years (QALY). AIM 3: Evaluate potential treatment mediators including self-efficacy-related mechanisms. Supplementary AIM: To evaluate the impact of psychiatric (i.e., PTSD, depression and alcohol abuse) symptoms on treatment outcome across the two conditions.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGNicotine PatchesNicotine replacement therapy in the form of nicotine patches will be provided to ART group participants beginning on their smoking quit date. Nicotine patches may be provided to control group participants as part of usual care.
BEHAVIORALmobile contingency management (mCM)Mobile contingency management (mCM) is a behavioral intervention designed to provide positive reinforcement for remaining abstinent from smoking. In this intervention, participants are loaned a smart phone equipped with a videocamera and a carbon monoxide (CO) monitor. Participants are trained to upload videos of themselves taking CO readings. Any time a participant uploads a video recording that suggests abstinence (i.e., low CO reading), he/she will be provided a monetary reward.
BEHAVIORALSmoking cessation counselingSmoking cessation counseling is a cognitive-behavioral treatment designed to prepare participants for a quit attempt, and to address relapse when necessary.
DRUGNicotine rescue methodNicotine replacement therapy in the form of nicotine gum or lozenges will be provided to ART group participants beginning on their smoking quit date. Nicotine gum or lozenges may be provided to control group participants as part of usual care.
DRUGBupropionBupropion SR may be prescribed to medically eligible ART group participants beginning one week prior to quit date. Bupropion may also be prescribed to control group participants as part of usual care.

Timeline

Start date
2014-10-01
Primary completion
2018-03-30
Completion
2018-09-28
First posted
2014-09-19
Last updated
2022-01-04
Results posted
2019-03-07

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02245308. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.