Mobile Contingency Management for Marijuana and Cessation



Status:Completed
Conditions:Smoking Cessation, Psychiatric
Therapuetic Areas:Psychiatry / Psychology, Pulmonary / Respiratory Diseases
Healthy:No
Age Range:18 - 70
Updated:5/10/2018
Start Date:August 2016
End Date:May 17, 2017

Use our guide to learn which trials are right for you!

Mobile Contingency Management for Concurrent Abstinence From Cannabis and Cigarette Smoking: A Pilot Study

The purpose of this pilot project is to pilot-test a combined cannabis and smoking cessation
treatment. The intervention combines mobile technology with behavioral strategies,
counseling, and medications.

Cannabis is the most widely used illicit drug in the United States with 19.8 million current
users. Population based data indicate that almost all cannabis users (90%) have a lifetime
history of tobacco smoking and the majority (74%) currently smoke tobacco. While cannabis use
alone is associated with significant adverse health effects, tobacco smoking is the number
one preventable cause of illness and death in the U.S. This is true even among those using
illicit drugs where the tobacco -related mortality rate is twice that of the general
population. Among cannabis users, smoking tobacco is associated with increased frequency of
marijuana use, increased morbidity, and poorer cannabis cessation outcomes. There is strong
evidence for the short -term efficacy for cannabis use disorder (CUD) and smoking of
contingency management (CM). It is an intensive behavioral therapy that provides incentives
(vouchers, money) to individuals misusing substances contingent upon objective evidence from
drug use. Implementation of CM has been limited because of the need to verify abstinence
multiple times daily using clinic based monitoring and effects are short lived. The
investigators recently developed a smart -phone application which allows a patient to video
themselves several times daily while using a small CO monitor and to transmit the data to a
secure server which has made the use of CM for outpatient smoking cessation portable and
feasible. The mobile CM (mCM) approach paired with cognitive-behavioral counseling and
pharmacological smoking cessation aids has been effective in reducing smoking in the short
and long-term. The purpose of this pilot project is to pilot-test a combined cannabis and
smoking mCM intervention. The pilot will allow the investigators to examine feasibility of
the treatment and of planned recruitment strategies. These project aims will provide the
first step toward implementation of an innovative approach that builds upon the power of
mHealth technology to reduce the prevalence of both CUD and cigarette smoking.

Inclusion Criteria:

- report 40 or more days of cannabis use in the past 90 day;

- have smoked at least seven cigarettes in the past seven days;

- have been smoking for at least the past year;

- can speak and write fluent conversational English;

- are between 18 and 70 years of age; and

- are willing to make an attempt to quit both cannabis and tobacco smoking.

Exclusion Criteria:

- expected to have unstable medication regimen during the study;

- currently receiving non-study behavioral treatment for cannabis use disorder or
smoking;

- myocardial infarction in past six months;

- contraindication to NRT with no medical clearance;

- use of other forms of nicotine such as cigars, pipes, or chewing tobacco with
unwillingness to stop use of these forms;

- current pregnancy;

- primary psychotic disorder or current manic episode;

- substance use disorder (other than cannabis or nicotine) within the preceding three
months; or

- current imprisonment or psychiatric hospitalization.
We found this trial at
1
site
2301 Erwin Rd
Durham, North Carolina 27710
919-684-8111
Principal Investigator: Jean C Beckham, Ph.D.
Phone: 919-286-0411
Duke Univ Med Ctr As a world-class academic and health care system, Duke Medicine strives...
?
mi
from
Durham, NC
Click here to add this to my saved trials