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clinical trials |
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Aim 1: Develop and Test Approaches for Primary Cancer Prevention Through Treatment for Tobacco DependenceBeginning in the 20th century, cigarette smoking brought about an epidemic of death and disability unequaled in the history of the human race. Each year, more than 420,000 Americans die of tobacco-caused diseases, and cancer makes up a large portion of these deaths. It is estimated that 30 percent of all cancers are caused by tobacco use and that 90 percent of lung cancer is caused by smoking. Lung cancer has been the leading cause of cancer deaths in American men for over 50 years and surpassed breast cancer as the leading cause of cancer death in American women in 1987. In fact, if it were not for lung cancer, we would be winning the war on cancer in the United States, as rates of death from other cancers have fallen over the last few decades. Many other tobacco-caused cancers such as laryngeal, esophageal, and pancreatic, to name a few, contribute to the toll, and unfortunately, treatment success for most tobacco-caused cancer has not been effective. Therefore, the treatment of the underlying problem, that is, tobacco dependence, is imperative if we are to prevent these cancer deaths. The need for such intervention services led to the establishment of the Mayo Clinic Nicotine Dependence Center (NDC) in 1988. Over the past two decades, this effort has helped focus the scientific issues facing the field around four treatment principles — behavioral treatment, addictions treatment, pharmacotherapy, and relapse prevention. Researchers at the Nicotine Dependence Center have been among the leaders in all four of these areas, and our work continues to refine and to develop each principle. We have also widely disseminated the result of our clinical practice and research through a mature education program and more recently by training and certifying hundreds of Tobacco Treatment Specialists from across the country. Following are some of the ongoing research initiatives the Program has in the area of tobacco dependence research:
Traditional Pharmacotherapy Dr. Hurt is a co-investigator on a multicenter grant testing methylphenidate for treating tobacco dependence in smokers with ADHD and he recently was awarded an R21 to test the efficacy of methyplphenidate for treating tobacco dependence in smokers. Amit Sood, M.D., conducted an intramurally-funded pilot study which led to a trial using gabapentin for treating tobacco dependence. Dr. Sood, in collaboration with Dr. Ebbert, has also initiated a pilot trial using varenicline and sibutramine to treat smokers with the aim of testing whether the combination will help smokers to stop smoking without gaining weight. Nicotine researchers have collaborations with colleagues in the Department of Laboratory Medicine seeking to develop capabilities of assaying biological fluids for tobacco alkaloids. Recently Thomas Moyer, Ph.D., developed, tested, and instituted for research and clinical purposes the ability to measure nicotine, cotinine, trans-3-hydroxycotinine, anabasine, and nornicotine, utilizing HPLC-tandem mass spectrometry methodology. This allows researchers to measure these tobacco alkaloids at a level of precision not previously available at Mayo Clinic. This capability has resulted in better clinical practice, especially in the Mayo Clinic Transplant Program. In order to go onto the heart transplant list, the patient must be abstinent from tobacco for a minimum of six months. If the patient is a tobacco user, treatment in our Residential Treatment Program is mandated by the transplant team. The transplant team utilizes the highly specific tobacco alkaloid assays from Dr. Moyer's laboratory to biochemically confirm the patient's abstinence from tobacco and also to distinguish between tobacco use and nicotine replacement therapy.
Complementary and Alternative Medicine Approaches
Alcoholic Smokers
Smokeless Tobacco With funding through the Cancer Center from the Fraternal Order of Eagles, Drs. Ebbert, Dale, Hurt and Ivana Croghan, Ph.D., conducted an open label pilot study treating smokeless tobacco users using the 4 milligram (mg) nicotine lozenge. Biochemically-confirmed 7-day point prevalence tobacco abstinence 12 weeks (end-of-treatment) was 53 percent and 47 percent at six months, which led to the submission and funding of a new grant and continued study. In the new clinical trial, Drs. Ebbert, I. Croghan, and Hurt are investigating the efficacy of the nicotine lozenge for smokeless tobacco users. They are collaborating as well with Herbert Severson, Ph.D., at the Oregon Research Institute in Eugene, Ore. Dr. Ebbert has also competed successfully for funding from the Fraternal Order of Eagles for an open label trial using varenicline and bupropion for smokeless tobacco users. His ongoing collaborative relationship with Dorothy Hatsukami, Ph.D., at the University of Minnesota has now developed to the point that the University will be a site for the varenicline/bupropion grant submission in June 2008. In a related pilot project Paul Limburg, M.D., in collaboration with Drs. Hurt and I. Croghan developed and pilot tested a scannable questionnaire to survey patients who come for gastrointestinal endoscopy at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., to assess their tobacco use history. It is known that cigarette smoking has been associated with increased risk for esophageal squamous cell carcinoma, esophageal adenocarcinoma, and colorectal adenocarcinomas, but observational data regarding the use of smokeless tobacco and gastrointestinal cancer risk have not been rigorously examined. Since smokeless tobacco contains many of the same carcinogens found in cigarettes and since smokeless tobacco users frequently swallow their tobacco juice, this likely would increase the topical gastrointestinal exposure to carcinogens and may increase the risk of malignant transformation at one or more sites within this organ system. Dr. Limburg has surveyed over 3,000 patients and data analysis is in progress. If a relationship is shown, this will open up an avenue of research, not only for interventions for smokeless tobacco users but also to establish the feasibility of collecting cancer risk factor data from a large patient population with the documented presence or absence of gastrointestinal mucosal lesions, develop data collection instruments (in scannable format) that may be applied to observational studies of multiple gastrointestinal cancers, and to construct the foundation for a data resource that will facilitate future large-scale epidemiologic investigations of gastrointestinal cancer risk and protective factors. Treating tobacco dependence in cancer patients and outcome evaluations of patients treated at the NDC Treatment Program Very little work has been performed in treating tobacco dependence in patients with cancer, but Mayo investigators continue to try to close the research gap. Yolanda Garces, M.D., in the Department of Radiation Oncology has a number of ongoing projects treating tobacco dependence in Radiation Oncology patients. Along with Dr. Hurt and Gary Croghan, M.D., Ph.D., her research fills a major void in available knowledge. Her research shows that head and neck cancer patients who have been treated in the Nicotine Dependence Center Treatment Program who continue to smoke are much more likely to develop a second primary cancer, and this happens within a very short period of time (i.e., 1 to 3 years). Dr. Garces is continuing this work through an intramurally-funded CR20 grant "Tobacco Use in Radiation Oncology Patients." Dr. Ames has also continued to help evaluate the NDC's clinical program by performing an analysis of different variables in the Residential Treatment Program and found that there was improvement across a range of psychosocial factors. Finally, Dr. I. Croghan and Sandhya Pruthi, M.D., (Women's Cancer Program) have utilized intramural funding and existing databases to evaluate the potential relationship between smoking and breast cancer or other breast diseases and to evaluate the NDC Treatment Program outcomes to determine if there are differences based on gender. Dr. I. Croghan along with Dr. Hurt and Charles Loprinzi, M.D., published the results of the third North Central Cancer Treatment Group (NCCTG) trial of treatments for smokers in a randomized comparison of a nicotine inhaler and bupropion and reported that the nicotine inhaler significantly increased smoking abstinence beyond the effect of bupropion alone.
Young Adult Smokers and Surgical Patients
Ethnic and Racial Differences
Surgical Patients
Tobacco Document Research
Genetic Epidemiology and Risk Assessment Program
Minnesota Tobacco Control Research and Policy Center Specifically, this center will:
The Center will establish linkages throughout relevant dimensions of the University and Mayo communities - from basic biology to international prevention and treatment - but will reach significantly further, for example, to include treatment service providers such as Blue Cross Blue Shield Minnesota and valuable industrial partners engaged in the development of medications and biomedical instrumentation. By developing infrastructure supported by intramural resources, the investigators will efficiently integrate the existing tobacco control efforts which are wide ranging but diffusely located into an overarching framework which in turn will support cohesive approaches to facilitate the acquisition of extramural funding to support ongoing research, training, and clinical practice objectives. |
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