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Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05499377

The Abuse Liability of a Novel Heated Tobacco Product (IQOS) and Its Feasibility as a Menthol Cigarette Substitute

Effects of Heated Tobacco Product Flavor on Tobacco Use Behavior and Abuse Liability Among Menthol Cigarette Smokers

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
33 (actual)
Sponsor
Virginia Commonwealth University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
21 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

This project examines the influence of flavor availability on switching to an MRTP known as IQOS, part of the Heated Tobacco Product (HTP) class, among menthol smokers using clinical lab and naturalistic evaluations of abuse liability. Results will help federal regulators predict the public health impact on menthol cigarette smokers of policies restricting access to menthol-flavored HTPs.

Detailed description

The public health success of FDA's proposed ban on menthol cigarettes hinges upon whether menthol smokers who are unable to quit smoking switch to non-menthol cigarettes (no public health gain) or to potentially lower harm alternatives like heated tobacco products (HTP). In 2019, FDA authorized an HTP called "IQOS" and its tobacco- and menthol-flavored "HeatSticks" (HS) as a modified risk tobacco product (MRTP). One issue relevant to FDA's future action regarding IQOS will be "whether and how certain flavors may help adult cigarette smokers reduce cigarette use and switch to potentially less harmful products" (FDA, 2018). Understanding the potential for HTPs like IQOS to reduce the health burden of cigarettes requires targeted research investigating the extent to which flavor availability is important for menthol smokers to switch to HTPs. For one tobacco product to substitute for another, their abuse liabilities should be congruent. Validated clinical lab methods exist for comparing tobacco product abuse liability by characterizing their nicotine delivery profiles (via plasma nicotine and puff topography) and reinforcing efficacy (via subjective and behavioral measures). Naturalistic assessment can validate clinical lab results regarding use patterns and product substitution. The current study involves a two-arm, two-week, parallel group trial. The first week is an own brand (OB) menthol cigarette baseline, during which tobacco use will be assessed daily using ecological momentary assessment (EMA). On Monday and Friday, participants will complete clinical lab sessions that involve using OB cigarettes and responding to subjective measures and an Experimental Tobacco Marketplace (ETM) task that assesses willingness to substitute menthol cigarettes with an array of tobacco products including IQOS. During the next week, participants will be randomized to receive IQOS-menthol (n=25) or IQOS-tobacco (n=25); EMA and clinical lab visits will be repeated. Aim 1 assesses IQOS' abuse liability in a clinical lab setting. Outcomes include plasma nicotine levels, puffing behavior, responses about subjective effects, and product substitution from the ETM task. Aim 2 measures tobacco use patterns in naturalistic settings where participants will report daily OB and IQOS use outcomes via EMA. The overarching hypothesis is that, relative to OB, IQOS-menthol's abuse liability profile will differ less than IQOS-tobacco's, suggesting that menthol smokers will be more likely to substitute an HTP for combustible menthol cigarettes when a menthol-flavored HTP is available. Results will deepen our understanding of the public health impact of HTPs and policies that might restrict access to menthol-flavored MRTPs.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICETobacco product administration and assessmentParticipants are first instructed to smoke their usual brand of menthol cigarettes normally for the next 7 days and avoid using any other tobacco products. After this baseline week, participants are randomized to 1 of 2 HTP flavor conditions (tobacco-flavored HeatSticks or Fresh Menthol-flavored HeatSticks), with equal probability and provided with a supply of their condition specific HTP and asked to use it in place of their usual menthol cigarettes for the next week. Participants use their own brand menthol cigarettes and assigned HTP both at home (naturalistic use) and in the clinical laboratory (two visits/week).

Timeline

Start date
2022-11-28
Primary completion
2023-09-22
Completion
2023-09-22
First posted
2022-08-12
Last updated
2025-01-31
Results posted
2025-01-31

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05499377. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.