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Clinical Research Directory

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3 clinical studies listed.

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Addiction Nicotine

Tundra lists 3 Addiction Nicotine clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.

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RECRUITING

NCT07322432

The CONQUER Trial - Cessation Of Nicotine, QUitting With E-cigarette Reduction

This clinical trial evaluates the VapeAway system, a novel, multi-modal intervention designed to address the multifaceted nature of vaping addiction. VapeAway combines progressive nicotine tapering via proprietary filters, behavioral substitution with a sensory device (Fix Bar), and structured digital support. The purpose of this research is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of the investigational VapeAway system, a multi-component behavioral and nicotine-reduction intervention, for promoting cessation of nicotine-containing e-cigarette use in motivated adults. The primary objective is to determine if the VapeAway program can achieve a Continuous Abstinence Rate (CAR) of at least 25% at 30 days post-intervention completion, a rate which will be statistically compared to the historical spontaneous cessation rate of approximately 7%. Secondary objectives include assessing reductions in biochemical nicotine exposure (cotinine), vaping frequency, withdrawal symptoms, and electronic cigarette dependence, as well as characterizing the safety and tolerability profile of the intervention. Participants will be asked to follow the VapeAway system (filters, Fix Bar and timeout periods) as prescribed by the protocol for about 42 days. During this time, participants should keep track of vaping sessions throughout the trial.

Gender: All

Ages: 21 Years - Any

Updated: 2026-01-07

1 state

Addiction Nicotine
NOT YET RECRUITING

NCT07292883

Accelerated dTMS Smoking Cessation

The goal of this clinical trial is to examine whether a 5-day course of bilateral accelerated deep transcranial magnetic stimulation (aTMS) is a feasible treatment to help adults (18-65) with Tobacco Use Disorder to quit smoking. This study aims to enroll 30-40 participants and will examine treatment tolerability, treatment acceptability, participant retention, and adherence to scheduled treatment sessions. There are two key objectives and hypotheses: Objective 1: To evaluate whether a 1-week course of bilateral aTMS (4 sessions per day for 5 days) is feasible and tolerable as a smoking cessation treatment. Hypothesis 1: Feasibility will be demonstrated by acceptable tolerability, acceptability, retention, and adherence, with a practical target of 30 out of 40 participants completing the treatment. Objective 2: To explore how aTMS affects smoking outcomes, including: * Point-prevalence abstinence at end of treatment and at Weeks 3, 5, and 9. * Prolonged/continuous abstinence at Weeks 13 and 26. * Craving, cigarettes per day, and dependence severity. Hypothesis 2: Participants will show improvements on these outcomes from post-treatment through follow-up.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-12-18

1 state

Tobacco Use Disorder
Addiction Nicotine
RECRUITING

NCT05505188

Predictive and Impact of Pain After 6 Months of Radiotherapy, in Head and Neck Cancer

Head and neck cancers are a source of complications and after-effects related to the disease and treatment. These cancers and their treatment alter the quality of life of patients and generate pain with physical and psychological components. Chronic pain affects 36% of patients at 6 months and 30% after this period. These pains are responsible for the consumption of level II and III analgesics in 53% of these patients. At the same time, after the end of treatment, nearly a quarter of patients continued to smoke and half still consumed alcohol at least twice a week. The hypothesis of this research is to investigate the correlation between pain and the continuation of addictions, the occurrence of depressive states, asthenia and the alteration of the patients' global quality of life. The investigators propose a two-center prospective cohort study to evaluate this hypothesis at 6 months after radiotherapy treatment. This study is planned to include 120 patients with a first head and neck cancer whit radiotherapy as part of their treatment sequence. The expected duration of inclusion is 18 months. The identification of factors affecting survival, quality of life and patient compliance is essential to determine appropriate management, particularly by creating appropriate therapeutic education programs.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-07-25

Neuropathic Pain
Anxiety Disorder/Anxiety State
Pain, Chronic
+5