Varenicline and Accelerated Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) for Quitting Nicotine Use (Pilot Study)
- Conditions
- Nicotine DependenceTranscranial Magnetic StimulationVapingSmoking CessationSmoking (Tobacco) Addiction
- Interventions
- Device: Transcranial Magnetic StimulationDevice: Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation ShamBehavioral: Nicotine Cessation Counseling
- Registration Number
- NCT07145866
- Lead Sponsor
- Massachusetts General Hospital
- Brief Summary
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if a combination of varenicline and accelerated Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) works to help adults quit using nicotine products. Researchers will compare varenicline + active TMS to varenicline + sham (inactive) TMS to see the effect of TMS on reaching abstinence. The main question it aims to answer is: Does receiving active TMS + varenicline lead to higher abstinence rates and lower nicotine craving?
Participants will be asked to:
* Complete 2 brain MRI scans
* Take varenicline every day for 12 weeks
* Quit using nicotine products at the end of the second week of varenicline
* Complete 5 consecutive days (Monday-Friday, uninterrupted) of TMS treatments
* Complete 12 brief, weekly follow-up visits
* Complete a brief daily survey each day that they take the study drug
- Detailed Description
This is a 12-week randomized parallel design, double-blind, 2-arm clinical trial consisting of a combination of circuit-targeted TMS and varenicline in 30 adults aged 18-65 with nicotine use disorder who would like to reduce or stop nicotine use.
Eligible participants will complete a baseline assessment of questionnaires and laboratory assessments. They will be randomized to receive varenicline and either active or sham TMS. Participants will be randomized at their baseline scan visit, during which they will undergo urinalysis, an fMRI scan, and a task and questionnaire battery. At this visit, participants will receive the study medication and will be instructed to take it for 12 weeks titrated to 1mg twice daily over seven days.
Shortly after, participants will complete a TMS treatment preparation visit during which the treatment target is located and stimulation intensity of the TMS is determined. This target is used in the subsequent TMS Treatment Week consisting of 5 consecutive days of 5 TMS treatments per day. Participants' quit date will be set for the Saturday following their TMS treatments.
The week after completing their TMS treatments, they will return for a second imaging visit identical to the baseline scan.
Each week of the varenicline treatment period, participants will complete weekly follow-ups with study staff, either virtually or in-person, to determine nicotine use and complete questionnaires regarding their substance use in the past week, depression, and anxiety. Six of these visits will include brief sessions of nicotine use cessation counseling with a trained study staff member.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- NOT_YET_RECRUITING
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 30
- Age ≥ 18 and ≤65;
- The ability to give written, informed consent;
- Fluency in English;
- Reported interest in quitting nicotine vaping or smoking within the next month;
- Nicotine dependence, as defined by a score of ≥4 on the 10-question E-cigarette Dependence Inventory (ECDI) or Fagerström Test for Nicotine Dependence (FTND);
- Smoke or vape nicotine daily for at least the past 90 days, as confirmed by self-report and timeline follow-back methods;
- Saliva cotinine >30ng/mL;
- Pregnancy or breastfeeding;
- Use of smoking cessation pharmacotherapy in the past month;
- Unwilling to abstain during the study from using smoking cessation aids other than those provided by the study;
- Prior adverse drug reaction to varenicline;
- Receiving or planning to receive other TMS treatments or investigational drugs during course of participation
- Contraindications to TMS (including seizures, metallic implants, severe existing tinnitus, etc.);
- Contraindications to MRI (including presence of a cardiac pacemaker or pacemaker wires, metallic particles in the body, vascular clips in the head or previous neurosurgery, prosthetic heart valves, claustrophobia);
- Inpatient psychiatric hospitalization or suicide attempts in the past six months, or recent active suicidal ideation or suicidal behavior identified at enrollment or baseline visits;
- History of seizures and/or history of TBI subtypes associated with elevated seizure risk (e.g. penetrating injury and intraparenchymal hemorrhage)
- History of unstable neurological illness or major medical illness, such as epilepsy or renal impairment, in the past six months, unless clearly resolved;
- In the opinion of the investigators, evidence of active problem substance use severe enough to compromise ability to safely participate;
- In the opinion of the investigators, unable to safely participate in this study and/or provide reliable data (e.g., claustrophobia, unable to tolerate TMS or MRI procedures, etc.).
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Varenicline + Active TMS varenicline In this arm, participants will take 12 weeks of varenicline. They will also receive 5 consecutive days of 5 hourly TMS treatments, adjusted to an individualized target specific to the participant based on their brain MRI collected at the baseline imaging visit. Participants will also receive 6 brief nicotine cessation counseling sessions. Varenicline + Active TMS Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation In this arm, participants will take 12 weeks of varenicline. They will also receive 5 consecutive days of 5 hourly TMS treatments, adjusted to an individualized target specific to the participant based on their brain MRI collected at the baseline imaging visit. Participants will also receive 6 brief nicotine cessation counseling sessions. Varenicline + Active TMS Nicotine Cessation Counseling In this arm, participants will take 12 weeks of varenicline. They will also receive 5 consecutive days of 5 hourly TMS treatments, adjusted to an individualized target specific to the participant based on their brain MRI collected at the baseline imaging visit. Participants will also receive 6 brief nicotine cessation counseling sessions. Varenicine + Sham TMS varenicline In this arm, participants will receive 12 weeks of varenicline and instructions on how to take it. They will also receive 5 consecutive days of 5 hourly TMS treatments, adjusted to an individualized target specific to the participant based on their brain MRI collected at the baseline imaging visit. However, the sham setting will deliver no magnetic field to the brain; instead, it will deliver electrical current to the scalp to mimic the feel of active treatment. Participants will also receive 6 brief nicotine cessation counseling sessions. Varenicine + Sham TMS Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Sham In this arm, participants will receive 12 weeks of varenicline and instructions on how to take it. They will also receive 5 consecutive days of 5 hourly TMS treatments, adjusted to an individualized target specific to the participant based on their brain MRI collected at the baseline imaging visit. However, the sham setting will deliver no magnetic field to the brain; instead, it will deliver electrical current to the scalp to mimic the feel of active treatment. Participants will also receive 6 brief nicotine cessation counseling sessions. Varenicine + Sham TMS Nicotine Cessation Counseling In this arm, participants will receive 12 weeks of varenicline and instructions on how to take it. They will also receive 5 consecutive days of 5 hourly TMS treatments, adjusted to an individualized target specific to the participant based on their brain MRI collected at the baseline imaging visit. However, the sham setting will deliver no magnetic field to the brain; instead, it will deliver electrical current to the scalp to mimic the feel of active treatment. Participants will also receive 6 brief nicotine cessation counseling sessions.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Biochemically-confirmed continuous nicotine abstinence across study weeks 9-12 Week 9-Week 12 Point-prevalence abstinence from e-cigarette use was defined as self-report of no e-cigarette use since the last visit, bioverified by saliva cotinine \<30 ng/ml. Continuous abstinence is defined as observed point-prevalence abstinence over specified study visits at weeks 9, 10, 11 and 12. The primary analysis will compare the proportion of participants achieving continuous abstinence in the TMS + varenicline group versus the Sham + varenicline group using a chi-square test. If expected cell counts are low (\<5 in any cell), Fisher's exact test will be used instead.
Resting State Functional Connectivity (rsFC) Baseline, Week 12 Within-network resting state Functional Connectivity (rsFC) will be computed by extracting the mean BOLD time series from each region of interest comprising the addiction circuit and calculating pairwise Pearson correlations, which will then be Fisher z-transformed and averaged across all ROI pairs to derive a single within-network rsFC metric per participant at each time point. To isolate effects at the circuit level rather than changes induced by stimulation of the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) target site itself, the mPFC stimulation region will be excluded from the connectivity analyses. The primary analytic approach will use a linear mixed-effects model with fixed effects for time (baseline vs. post-treatment), treatment group (TMS vs. sham TMS), and their interaction, as well as a random intercept for each participant.
Change in Insula Activation to Nicotine Cues During a Cue Reactivity Task Measured by fMRI Baseline, Week 12 Neural responses to nicotine and neutral cues will be modeled, convolved with the canonical hemodynamic response function, and contrast images for nicotine \> neutral cues will be generated for each participant at each time point. These contrast images will be entered into second-level analyses to test group-level effects. The primary region of interest (ROI) will be the bilateral anterior insula, defined using an anatomical mask from the Harvard-Oxford atlas. The main analytic model will be a mixed-effects repeated-measures ANOVA or linear mixed-effects model with fixed effects of time (pre vs. post), treatment group (TMS + varenicline vs. sham TMS + varenicline), and their interaction, with subject-level random intercepts. The key test of our hypothesis is the time × treatment interaction within the anterior insula ROI, which reflects whether treatment modulates cue-elicited insula activity.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method 7-day point prevalence abstinence at Week 12 Week 12 Point-prevalence abstinence from e-cigarette use was defined as self-report of no e-cigarette use since the last visit, bioverified by saliva cotinine \<30 ng/ml.
Nicotine withdrawal symptoms Baseline, Week 12 Minnesota Nicotine Withdrawal Scale (MNWS) total scores over study weeks 1 to 12. The MNWS is an 8-item measure assessing the severity of nicotine withdrawal symptoms. Items are scored on an ordinal scale from 0 ("not at all") to 4 ("extreme") with total scores ranging from 0 to 32. Higher scores indicate greater severity of nicotine withdrawal symptoms.
Nicotine Craving (vaping) Baseline, Week 12 Summed scores from the Questionnaire of Vaping Craving (QVC) over Study Weeks 1 to 12. The QVC is a 10-item self-rated validated measure (ranging from 10 to 70) of vaping craving that examines desire and intent to vape and anticipation of positive outcomes related to e-cigarette use, with higher scores indicating greater cravings to vape. This is applicable to those who report using e-cigarettes.
Nicotine Craving (smoking) Baseline, Week 12 Summed scores from the Questionnaire on Smoking Urges-Brief (QSU-Brief) over Study Weeks 1 to 12. This is a 10-item self-report measure of smoking urges and cravings with scores ranging from 10-70; higher scores indicate greater cravings to smoke. This is applicable to those who report smoking cigarettes.
Change in Depressive Symptoms Baseline, Week 12 The Beck Depression Inventory-II (BDI-II) will be used to assess symptoms of depression. The scale ranges from 0 - 63, with a higher score indicating greater depression.
Change in Anxiety Symptoms Baseline, Week 12 The Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI) will be used to assess the frequency of anxiety symptoms, including cognitive and somatic symptoms. Higher scores indicate greater anxiety severity, with scores ranging from 0-63.
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Massachusetts General Hospital
🇺🇸Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Massachusetts General Hospital🇺🇸Boston, Massachusetts, United StatesJodi M Gilman, PhDContact617-643-7293jgilman1@mgh.harvard.edu