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12 clinical studies listed.

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Electronic Cigarette Use

Tundra lists 12 Electronic Cigarette Use clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.

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RECRUITING

NCT06609109

Effect of Cannabis on E-Cigarette Use Behavior

The purpose of this study is to determine the impact of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) administration on motivational, subjective, and physiological effects of electronic cigarettes. The study's goals are to test demand for e-cigarettes, tobacco craving, affect, heart rate, blood pressure, expired breath carbon monoxide, and cognitive performance. Researchers will compare multiple doses of THC and a placebo in participants who smoke e-cigarettes and either smoke or vape THC in the laboratory.

Gender: All

Ages: 21 Years - Any

Updated: 2026-04-09

1 state

Cannabis Use
Tobacco Use
Electronic Cigarette Use
RECRUITING

NCT04907136

Developing and Testing Health Warning Labels on the ENDS Device

In this project, after systematically developing electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) pictorial health warning labels (HWLs), a proven clinical lab model will be used to examine and test their effect when these are placed on the ENDS device on a variety of subjective (e.g. satisfaction, harm perception, nicotine dependence, intention to quit) and objective outcomes (e.g. plasma nicotine, puff topography) in young adults.

Gender: All

Ages: 21 Years - 35 Years

Updated: 2026-04-03

1 state

Electronic Cigarette Use
RECRUITING

NCT05338801

Effect of Menthol on ENDS Users' Addiction and Exposure

The use of electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS; e-cigarettes) has reached epidemic levels among young people in the United States (US). ENDS heat and vaporize a nicotine-containing liquid to produce an inhalable aerosol mist. While generally considered less harmful than combustible cigarettes, ENDS use exposes users to dependence-producing nicotine and respiratory and cardiovascular toxicants such as aldehydes. Flavor is a major factor in getting young people to use ENDS, thus limiting flavors to menthol and tobacco for prefilled cartridge ENDS "pod mods" was the first major action taken by the FDA to reduce the spread of ENDS among young people. Menthol flavor, however, can present a potential risk given its increasing popularity among young people in the US, and its puffing and nicotine-enhancing properties. Yet, the extent of menthol's ability to affect users' experience and puffing patterns, and how these affect dependence, exposure to toxicants, and clinical outcomes continue to be understudied. Such evidence will be critical to the FDA's ability to set further regulatory standards to reduce ENDS potential harm. The investigators will conduct a 2x2 (pre-post x menthol vs. tobacco flavor) crossover clinical lab study. The investigator will recruit current/past month ENDS users (n=250, 21-35 yrs), who will attend two sessions and use their ENDS once with menthol and once with tobacco flavors. The proposed studies will answer two key regulatory questions consistent with FDA's focus on the role of flavor in tobacco products' addiction and toxicity; 1) compared to tobacco flavor, does menthol carry additional risk by enhancing puffing, abuse liability, and toxicant exposure in ENDS users, and; 2) is this effect more pronounced among high dependence compared to other users. Other outcomes such as harm perception, satisfaction, clinical responses, intention to use or quit, and group comparisons such as according to race, and sex will allow the FDA a comprehensive assessment of the pros and cons of regulating mentholated ENDS for different segments of the society. Such evidence will help advance FDA regulatory policies with the potential to reduce ENDS harm.

Gender: All

Ages: 21 Years - 35 Years

Updated: 2026-04-01

1 state

Electronic Cigarette Use
RECRUITING

NCT06610838

Effects of E-cigarette Use on Health

Electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) are used by millions of Americans, however their long-term health effects are unknown. This research proposal will quantify the effects of long-term ENDS use on validated and novel biomarkers of cardiovascular and pulmonary disease and how they are influenced by use heaviness, age, body weight, and co-use of other products. This study will produce the most informative evidence to date on how long-term ENDS use affects cardiovascular and pulmonary health.

Gender: All

Ages: 21 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-12-24

1 state

Electronic Cigarette Use
RECRUITING

NCT06489249

Role of Inflammation in Vascular Phenotype Associated With E-cigarette Use

The use of electronic nicotine delivery systems, or e-cigarettes - colloquially referred to as "vaping" - in the United States has increased exponentially since their introduction to the US market in 2007. Prevalence of ever and current e-cigarette use is highest among teenagers and young adults with 16-28% of this population having reported vaping. While the majority of e-cigarette users are current tobacco smokers, 32.5% of current e-cigarette users are never- or former-smokers, representing a growing population of young adults who exclusively vape. While e-cigarettes have been marketed as a safer alternative to tobacco cigarettes, clinical studies examining these claims are limited. Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the primary cause of premature death among tobacco cigarette smokers and reductions in vascular endothelial function, a significant predictor of future CVD, are detectible in otherwise healthy young adults who smoke. Despite the explosion in e-cigarette use among young adults, the health effects - especially the effects on mechanisms of vascular function - of these devices remain relatively unexplored. The purpose of this study is to directly asses the mechanistic role of inflammation in this dysfunction.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 24 Years

Updated: 2025-12-15

1 state

Electronic Cigarette Use
Endothelial Dysfunction
Inflammation
RECRUITING

NCT05881304

Switching Individuals in Treatment for Opioid Use Disorder Who Smoke Cigarettes to the SREC

The goal of this study is to conduct a pilot randomized waitlist-controlled trial to assess the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary effects of substituting the NIDA standardized research e-cigarette (SREC) for combusted cigarettes in MOUD-TUD who are not ready to quit smoking. A waitlist controlled RCT using a mixed-methods sequential explanatory design will investigate the impact of SREC provision on: 1) tobacco use behavior (e.g., cigarettes per day \[primary outcome\], SREC use), 2) biomarkers (e.g., carbon monoxide, anabasine), 3) cigarette dependence and withdrawal, and 4) short-term health effects and tolerability (e.g., respiratory symptoms, substance use). In the proposed RCT, N=40 adults stable on MOUD with buprenorphine who report daily smoking recruited from MGH primary care practices will be randomly assigned to receive the SREC for 8 weeks, either immediately (iSREC), or after an 8-week delay (waitlist control \[WLC\]). They will be followed an additional 4 weeks after SREC provision ends (to 12 weeks in iSREC and 20 weeks in WLC).

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-11-17

1 state

Electronic Cigarette Use
ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING

NCT05396911

Development of UP2UTobacco for High School Youth

Tobacco use is increasing among youth in the U.S. However evidence for the long-term effectiveness of tobacco cessation programs for youth is limited. The current study seeks to adapt and evaluate a universal group-based youth brief tobacco intervention for 9th grade students. This study will use a sequential, multi-method research design beginning with qualitative roundtable discussions with 9th grade students to adapt an existing young adult brief tobacco intervention for youth. Roundtable discussions with students will identify salient intervention themes and strategies for targeting the intervention and developing the text messages. The second phase of the study evaluates the brief intervention, UP2UTobacco, through a cluster randomized controlled trial that compares UP2UTobacco to a no treatment control. It is hypothesized that the UP2UTobacco will produce greater abstinence at the 6-month follow-up compared to the no treatment control. Roughly 90% of daily smokers started before the age of 18, and 2,000 youth smoke a cigarette for the first time each day in the U.S. Additionally, e-cigarette use is on the rise among youth, and is linked to cigarette initiation among tobacco naïve youth. In order to curb the rise of tobacco use among youth, interventions that are easily implemented and easily disseminated need to be developed for youth addressing currently available products and contemporary patterns of use. If the interventions in the current study are proven efficacious, they can easily be disseminated to other schools to continue reducing youth tobacco use.

Gender: All

Ages: 14 Years - 15 Years

Updated: 2025-10-30

1 state

Tobacco Use Cessation
Tobacco Use
Electronic Cigarette Use
RECRUITING

NCT06474299

The Avenues Study: Dual Use Cessation

The overarching goal of this research is to determine the most effective approach for helping dual users of cigarettes and electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) quit smoking. 500 participants will be enrolled and can expect to be on study for 12 months.

Gender: All

Ages: 21 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-10-30

1 state

Smoking Cessation
Electronic Cigarette Use
ENROLLING BY INVITATION

NCT06919276

Nicotine and Cannabis Vape Labeling Experiment - Spring 2025

This study assesses how the ways in which nicotine and cannabis vaping devices are labeled impact use susceptibility, anticipated effects, and health harm.

Gender: All

Ages: 11 Years - 19 Years

Updated: 2025-04-09

1 state

Vaping
Adolescent
Electronic Cigarette Use
+2
ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING

NCT05206435

Methadone-Maintained Smokers Switching to E-Cigarettes

Participants in this randomized clinical trial will be methadone-maintained smokers interested in switching to electronic cigarettes (ECs). There will be a total of 7 study visits over the course of 6 weeks; each visit includes psychometric assessment and biomarker measurements. After completion of the baseline visit, participants will be randomized to either: 1) 6 weeks of EC use (JUUL 5% nicotine pods) or 2) 6 weeks of nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) in the form of nicotine lozenges. EC and NRT use will begin the day after the baseline assessment.

Gender: All

Ages: 21 Years - 65 Years

Updated: 2024-11-15

1 state

Nicotine Dependence
Electronic Cigarette Use
RECRUITING

NCT06142877

Effects of Social Media Use on Young Adults' E-Cigarette Use

The goal of this clinical trial is to test the effects of social media use on e-cigarette use in young adults who use e-cigarettes. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Does reducing social media use change young adults' e-cigarette use? * Does reducing social media use change things such as young adults' mental health and what they see on social media? Participants will complete surveys and submit screenshots showing how much time they spend on social media. Researchers will compare young adults who reduce their social media use to young adults who use social media as usual, to see if their e-cigarette use differs.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 25 Years

Updated: 2024-05-07

1 state

Electronic Cigarette Use
RECRUITING

NCT06291597

Vaping Adverse Lung and Heart Events Cohort

This prospective study assesses the pulmonary and cardiovascular effets of vaping in adult electronic cigarette users with biannual visits and a 5-year follow-up.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2024-03-04

Vaping
Electronic Cigarette Use