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Biopsychosocial Predictors of Nicotine Relapse

Biopsychosocial Predictors of Nicotine Relapse

Recruiting
18-60 years
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

This study aims to investigate the associations between emotion regulation ability, stress-induced neural activity changes, and susceptibility to relapse in smokers attempting to quit. Participants will undergo assessments of emotion regulation, neural activity via quantitative electroencephalography (qEEG), and stress responses before and during a 24-hour nicotine abstinence period. They will then participate in a computerized smoking cessation intervention, and their abstinence status will be monitored for 6 months.

Description

The study will examine the unique and interactive effects of emotion regulation ability (a trait-like vulnerability factor) and biomarkers of stress responses (emotion regulation and neural activation changes) prior to smoking cessation, on cravings, abstinence adherence, and response to a smoking cessation intervention.

The study will be divided into three main phases:

  • Ad libitum nicotine use (Day 1): Participants will smoke as usual. Baseline assessments of emotion regulation (heart rate variability), neural activity (qEEG), stress responses (salivary cortisol), and nicotine craving will be conducted before and after exposure to a stress task.
  • Acute 24-hour abstinence (Day 2): Participants will abstain from smoking for 24 hours. Emotion regulation, neural activity, withdrawal symptoms, and cue-induced cravings will be assessed.
  • Smoking cessation intervention (Days 3 to 180): Participants will engage in a computerized smoking cessation program. Abstinence will be biochemically verified at 3 and 6 months post-quit. Smoking lapses and time to relapse will also be monitored.

The primary outcomes are maintenance of abstinence, smoking lapses, and time to relapse. Secondary outcomes include changes in emotion regulation, neural activity, stress responses, withdrawal symptoms, and cue-induced cravings.

The study hypothesizes that smokers who fail to maintain long-term abstinence will exhibit enhanced stress-induced high-frequency qEEG oscillations, disrupted connectivity in emotion regulation brain regions, and emotion regulation deficits. It is also hypothesized that the interplay between these measures will predict smoking cessation outcomes.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Age 18-60 years
  • Smoking at least 10 cigarettes daily for at least 2 years
  • Intention to quit smoking
  • Medication-free

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Presence of psychiatric or medical treatment
  • Pregnancy
  • Current unstable medical illness
  • Recent (prior 6 months) drug or alcohol use disorder
  • Major Depression
  • Diagnosis of psychotic disorder

Study details
    Smoking
    Smoking Cessation
    Nicotine Addiction
    Tobacco Smoking Behavior

NCT06470321

University of Cyprus

21 October 2025

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