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Health Education Counseling With or Without Bupropion in Helping African Americans Stop Smoking

Enhancing Tobacco Use Treatment for African American Light Smokers

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT00666978
Enrollment
540
Registered
2008-04-25
Start date
2007-12-31
Completion date
2010-06-30
Last updated
2017-11-13

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Bladder Cancer, Cervical Cancer, Esophageal Cancer, Gastric Cancer, Head and Neck Cancer, Kidney Cancer, Leukemia, Liver Cancer, Lung Cancer, Pancreatic Cancer, Tobacco Use Disorder

Keywords

bladder cancer, cervical cancer, esophageal cancer, gastric cancer, renal cell carcinoma, adult primary liver cancer, non-small cell lung cancer, small cell lung cancer, pancreatic cancer, hypopharyngeal cancer, laryngeal cancer, lip and oral cavity cancer, nasopharyngeal cancer, oropharyngeal cancer, paranasal sinus and nasal cavity cancer, adult acute myeloid leukemia, tobacco use disorder

Brief summary

RATIONALE: A stop-smoking plan that includes health education counseling and bupropion may help African-American smokers stop smoking. It is not yet known whether health education counseling is more effective with or without bupropion in helping African Americans stop smoking. PURPOSE: This clinical trial is studying health education counseling and bupropion to see how well they work compared with a placebo and health education counseling in helping African Americans smokers stop smoking.

Detailed description

OBJECTIVES: Primary * To evaluate the efficacy of bupropion hydrochloride and health education counseling vs placebo and health education counseling for smoking cessation among African Americans who are light smokers. Secondary * To characterize CYP2A6 activity in African Americans who are light smokers by evaluating phenotype (3'hydroxycotinine/cotinine ratio \[3HC/COT\]) and CYP2A6 genotype. * To evaluate the relationship between CYP2A6 activity and smoking cessation outcomes. * To evaluate CYP2A6 genetic polymorphisms associated with nicotine and cotinine metabolism in African Americans who are light smokers. * To measure baseline cotinine and metabolite levels to evaluate the nicotine metabolism phenotype of 3HC/COT. * To evaluate the relationship between nicotine metabolism phenotype of 3HC/COT and smoking cessation outcomes. * To evaluate CYP2A6 genotype as a predictor of smoking cessation outcomes. Tertiary * To characterize CYP2B6 activity in African Americans who are light smokers by evaluating phenotype and CYP2B6 genotype. * To evaluate the relationship between CYP2B6 activity and smoking cessation outcomes. * To measure steady state bupropion hydrochloride and metabolite levels to identify a bupropion metabolism phenotype. * To evaluate the relationship between bupropion hydrochloride metabolism phenotype and smoking cessation outcomes. * To evaluate the relationship between CYP2B6 genetic polymorphisms (genotype) and blood levels of bupropion hydrochloride and active metabolites (phenotype). * To determine the effects of CYP2B6 genotype as predictors of smoking cessation outcomes. OUTLINE: Participants are randomized to one of two arms. * Arm I: Participants receive oral bupropion hydrochloride once or twice daily in weeks 0-6. Participants also undergo 6 sessions of health education counseling conducted in person during clinic visits in weeks 0, 3, and 7 and via telephone in weeks 1, 5, and 16. The health education counseling sessions include providing information about the risks of continued smoking and the benefits of quitting, developing a quit plan, outlining a concrete quit day preparation plan, discussing strategies for successful quitting, building social support, reducing stress, recognizing and managing withdrawal and craving, overcoming barriers to abstinence, and using medication for smoking cessation. Participants receive Kick It at Swope: Stop Smoking Guide, a culturally-sensitive smoking cessation guide, to review with their study counselor during the first counseling session. * Arm II: Participants receive an oral placebo once or twice daily in weeks 0-6. Participants also undergo health education counseling as in arm I. Participants complete baseline questionnaires about demographics, smoking history, and psychometrics, including the following: racial identity, depressive symptoms, alcohol use, stress, smoking consequences, social support, environmental influences of smoking, adherence to study medication, nicotine withdrawal, craving, and mood. Participants undergo serum sample collection in weeks 0 and 3. To standardize the time since the last cigarette, participants are asked to smoke one cigarette prior to serum sample collection in week 0. Samples are analyzed for nicotine metabolism phenotype and bupropion hydrochloride metabolism phenotype by liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry and CYP2A6 and CYP2B6 genotype by polymerase chain reaction and polymorphism analysis. Participants who self-report abstinence also undergo saliva sample collection in weeks 7 and 26 to measure cotinine levels to verify smoking status. After completion of study intervention, participants are followed at 6 months.

Interventions

BEHAVIORALsmoking cessation intervention
GENETICgene expression analysis
GENETICpolymerase chain reaction
OTHERcounseling intervention
OTHEReducational intervention
PROCEDUREpsychosocial assessment and care

Sponsors

National Cancer Institute (NCI)
CollaboratorNIH
Lisa Sanderson Cox, PhD
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
TRIPLE (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

DISEASE CHARACTERISTICS: * African American who has smoked ≤ 10 cigarettes per day for ≥ 2 years AND has smoked for ≥ 25 days within the past month * Not a heavy smoker * No other forms of tobacco within the past 30 days * Must be interested in stopping smoking * No other smoker in the household enrolled in this study PATIENT CHARACTERISTICS: * Has a home address and a functioning telephone number * Not planning to move from the Kansas City metro area within the next 12 months * Not pregnant or nursing * Negative pregnancy test * No alcohol or substance abuse within the past year * Not currently drinking ≥ 14 alcoholic drinks per week * No binge drinking (5 or more drinks on one occasion) on at least two occasions within the past month * No history of seizures or head trauma * No history of bulimia or anorexia nervosa * No myocardial infarction within the past 30 days * No reported use of opiates, cocaine, or stimulants * No diabetes requiring oral hypoglycemics or insulin PRIOR CONCURRENT THERAPY: * More than 30 days since prior nicotine replacement therapy, fluoxetine, clonidine, buspirone, or doxepin * No other concurrent medication that contains bupropion hydrochloride * No concurrent psychoactive medications

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Number of Participants With Salivary Cotinine-verified Smoking Abstinence at 6 Months6 monthsSalivary cotinine-verified smoking abstinence at 6 months. A cut point of 15 ng/ml was used to differentiate smokers from nonsmokers.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Number of Slow and Fast Metabolizers by Metabolite RatioWeeks 0Analyzed CYP2A6 by activity, called the nicotine metabolite ratio using a split between slow and fast metabolism at 0.31. The variants present in people in the slow genotype group include \*17, \*20, \*23,\*27, \*35, \*9, \*2, \*25, \*26, and \*4. The fast metabolizers have none of the variant alleles tested. Blood samples were collected for 3HC/COT ratio at Week 0.
Number of Participants for Each CYP2B6 AlleleWeek 3We genotyped CYP2B6 in 268 from the Bupropion arm as this polymorphism is related to bupropion metabolism.
Number of Slow and Fast Metabolizers by GenotypeWeek 0Analyzed CYP2A6 by genotype. The variants present in people in the slow genotype group include \*17, \*20, \*23,\*27, \*35, \*9, \*2, \*25, \*26, and \*4. The fast metabolizers have none of the variant alleles tested. Slow metabolizers have any reduction or loss of function variant. Fast metabolizers are \*1/\*1 genotype by exclusion.

Countries

United States

Participant flow

Participants by arm

ArmCount
Bupropion Arm
270 African American adults received bupropion (150mg bid) for 7 weeks in addition to health education counseling.
270
Placebo Arm
270 African American adults received placebo for 7 weeks in addition to health education counseling.
270
Total540

Baseline characteristics

CharacteristicPlacebo ArmTotalBupropion Arm
Age, Continuous46.2 years
STANDARD_DEVIATION 11.5
46.5 years
STANDARD_DEVIATION 11.3
46.8 years
STANDARD_DEVIATION 11.1
Age of first cigarette18.1 years
STANDARD_DEVIATION 7.3
17.6 years
STANDARD_DEVIATION 5.9
17.5 years
STANDARD_DEVIATION 5.8
Age started smoking regularly21.3 years
STANDARD_DEVIATION 7.4
21.1 years
STANDARD_DEVIATION 7.1
21.1 years
STANDARD_DEVIATION 6.7
BMI31.1 kg/m 2
STANDARD_DEVIATION 8.1
31.1 kg/m 2
STANDARD_DEVIATION 7.9
31.1 kg/m 2
STANDARD_DEVIATION 7.6
California Tobacco Survey: Inhale deeply61 Participants126 Participants65 Participants
Cigarettes per day7.9 cigarettes per day
STANDARD_DEVIATION 2.4
8.0 cigarettes per day
STANDARD_DEVIATION 2.5
8.0 cigarettes per day
STANDARD_DEVIATION 2.6
Confidence Scale7.8 units on a scale
STANDARD_DEVIATION 2
7.9 units on a scale
STANDARD_DEVIATION 2.4
7.9 units on a scale
STANDARD_DEVIATION 2.1
Depression(CESD-10) score8.2 units on a scale
STANDARD_DEVIATION 5.5
7.7 units on a scale
STANDARD_DEVIATION 5.2
7.2 units on a scale
STANDARD_DEVIATION 4.9
Education > or = high school229 Participants454 Participants225 Participants
Exhaled Carbon monoxide17.1 ppm
STANDARD_DEVIATION 10.5
16.4 ppm
STANDARD_DEVIATION 10
15.8 ppm
STANDARD_DEVIATION 9.4
Fagerstrom Test for Nicotine Dependence- 6 item3.3 score
STANDARD_DEVIATION 1.7
3.2 score
STANDARD_DEVIATION 1.7
3.1 score
STANDARD_DEVIATION 1.7
Married or living with partner75 Participants166 Participants91 Participants
Monthly family income <$1800158 Participants327 Participants169 Participants
Motivation Scale9.8 units on a scale
STANDARD_DEVIATION 0.7
9.7 units on a scale
STANDARD_DEVIATION 0.8
9.7 units on a scale
STANDARD_DEVIATION 0.8
Pharmacotherapy use during most recent quit attempt61 Participants133 Participants72 Participants
Quit Attempts3.9 Quit Attempts
STANDARD_DEVIATION 7.4
3.7 Quit Attempts
STANDARD_DEVIATION 7.7
3.5 Quit Attempts
STANDARD_DEVIATION 7.9
Race (NIH/OMB)
American Indian or Alaska Native
0 Participants0 Participants0 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
Asian
0 Participants0 Participants0 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
Black or African American
270 Participants540 Participants270 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
More than one race
0 Participants0 Participants0 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
0 Participants0 Participants0 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
Unknown or Not Reported
0 Participants0 Participants0 Participants
Race (NIH/OMB)
White
0 Participants0 Participants0 Participants
Region of Enrollment
United States
270 participants540 participants270 participants
Serum Cotinine283.0 ng/ml
STANDARD_DEVIATION 151.2
275.8 ng/ml
STANDARD_DEVIATION 155.8
268.7 ng/ml
STANDARD_DEVIATION 160.2
Sex: Female, Male
Female
183 Participants357 Participants174 Participants
Sex: Female, Male
Male
87 Participants183 Participants96 Participants
Smoke-free household67 Participants132 Participants65 Participants
Smoke Menthol Cigarettes228 Participants452 Participants224 Participants
Stress (PSS-4)5.5 units on a scale
STANDARD_DEVIATION 3.3
5.2 units on a scale
STANDARD_DEVIATION 3.2
4.9 units on a scale
STANDARD_DEVIATION 3.1
Time to first cigarette,< or = 30 minutes199 Participants390 Participants191 Participants
Weight194.8 lbs
STANDARD_DEVIATION 54
195.5 lbs
STANDARD_DEVIATION 52.9
196.1 lbs
STANDARD_DEVIATION 51.8

Adverse events

Event typeEG000
affected / at risk
EG001
affected / at risk
deaths
Total, all-cause mortality
0 / 2700 / 270
other
Total, other adverse events
46 / 27029 / 270
serious
Total, serious adverse events
8 / 27013 / 270

Outcome results

Primary

Number of Participants With Salivary Cotinine-verified Smoking Abstinence at 6 Months

Salivary cotinine-verified smoking abstinence at 6 months. A cut point of 15 ng/ml was used to differentiate smokers from nonsmokers.

Time frame: 6 months

ArmMeasureValue (COUNT_OF_PARTICIPANTS)
Bupropion ArmNumber of Participants With Salivary Cotinine-verified Smoking Abstinence at 6 Months36 Participants
Placebo ArmNumber of Participants With Salivary Cotinine-verified Smoking Abstinence at 6 Months27 Participants
Comparison: Based on our previous studies, sample size was determined a priori assuming a two-sided x2 test with a type I error rate of .05, a power of 80%, and a cotinine-verified abstinence rate of 15% in the placebo group and 25% in the bupropion SR group at week 26, with the assumption that those lost to follow-up would be imputed as smokers.p-value: 0.2395% CI: [0.82, 2.35]t-test, 2 sided
Secondary

Number of Participants for Each CYP2B6 Allele

We genotyped CYP2B6 in 268 from the Bupropion arm as this polymorphism is related to bupropion metabolism.

Time frame: Week 3

ArmMeasureGroupValue (COUNT_OF_PARTICIPANTS)
Bupropion ArmNumber of Participants for Each CYP2B6 AlleleCYP2B6*4 Allele Frequency2 Participants
Bupropion ArmNumber of Participants for Each CYP2B6 AlleleCYP2B6*5 Allele Frequency6 Participants
Bupropion ArmNumber of Participants for Each CYP2B6 AlleleCYP2B6*6 Allele Frequency95 Participants
Bupropion ArmNumber of Participants for Each CYP2B6 AlleleCYP2B6*9 Allele Frequency0 Participants
Bupropion ArmNumber of Participants for Each CYP2B6 AlleleCYP2B6*16 Allele Frequency0 Participants
Bupropion ArmNumber of Participants for Each CYP2B6 AlleleCYP2B6*18 Allele Frequency17 Participants
Bupropion ArmNumber of Participants for Each CYP2B6 AlleleCYP2B6*22 Allele Frequency6 Participants
p-value: <0.05Regression, Linear
Secondary

Number of Slow and Fast Metabolizers by Genotype

Analyzed CYP2A6 by genotype. The variants present in people in the slow genotype group include \*17, \*20, \*23,\*27, \*35, \*9, \*2, \*25, \*26, and \*4. The fast metabolizers have none of the variant alleles tested. Slow metabolizers have any reduction or loss of function variant. Fast metabolizers are \*1/\*1 genotype by exclusion.

Time frame: Week 0

Population: This variant is related to nicotine metabolism and was collected from all study participants but not analyzed by study arm as it does not relate to the study medication. Data pre-specified to be collected and reported as a single arm. Blood was unable to be analyzed for CYP2A6 genotype for 6 participants.

ArmMeasureGroupValue (COUNT_OF_PARTICIPANTS)
Bupropion ArmNumber of Slow and Fast Metabolizers by GenotypeSlow Metabolizers by Genotype265 Participants
Bupropion ArmNumber of Slow and Fast Metabolizers by GenotypeFast Metabolizers by Genotype269 Participants
Secondary

Number of Slow and Fast Metabolizers by Metabolite Ratio

Analyzed CYP2A6 by activity, called the nicotine metabolite ratio using a split between slow and fast metabolism at 0.31. The variants present in people in the slow genotype group include \*17, \*20, \*23,\*27, \*35, \*9, \*2, \*25, \*26, and \*4. The fast metabolizers have none of the variant alleles tested. Blood samples were collected for 3HC/COT ratio at Week 0.

Time frame: Weeks 0

Population: This variant is related to nicotine metabolism and was collected from all study participants but not analyzed by study arm as it does not relate to the study medication. Data pre-specified to be collected and reported as a single arm.

ArmMeasureGroupValue (COUNT_OF_PARTICIPANTS)
Bupropion ArmNumber of Slow and Fast Metabolizers by Metabolite RatioFast Metabolizers by Nicotine Metabolite Ratio236 Participants
Bupropion ArmNumber of Slow and Fast Metabolizers by Metabolite RatioSlow Metabolizers by Nicotine Metabolite Ratio214 Participants
p-value: 0.002295% CI: [0.95, 0.99]Regression, Logistic

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Mar 29, 2026