At a glance
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Targeting Foundational Memory Processes in Nicotine Addiction: A Translational Clinical Neuroscience Study of a Retrieval-Extinction Intervention to Reduce Craving and Smoking Behavior
In Brief
A clinical study evaluating Retrieval Extinction Training (RET) and Control Retrieval Extinction Training (RET) for Nicotine Use Disorder. Completed, enrolled 191 participants across 1 site.
Detailed Summary
The purpose of the study is to see if a behavioral intervention known as retrieval-extinction training (RET) might affect craving in response to nicotine cues (e.g., pictures, videos and objects) and smoking behavior in men and women who smoke cigarettes.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
Retrieval extinction training (RET) is a behavioral intervention that involves cue-elicited retrieval followed by extinction training (i.e., massed unreinforced exposure to drug-associated cues). The first element of RET involves briefly presenting drug-associated cues to retrieve drug use memories. The second element, occurring after a brief interval, involves extinction training. It is argued that the initial retrieval of the memories prior to extinction training initiates a period of instability, which is followed by reconsolidation of the memories back into long-term storage. Extinction training during the period of instability is presumed to overwrite the original drug-associated cue with a non-drug-associated cue, to attenuate expression of drug-seeking behavior.
The control retrieval extinction training (RET) for the NR-E arms serves as the control intervention to the RET behavioral intervention. The first element of the control RET involves briefly presenting retrieval cues that contain neutral, non-smoking content. The second element, occurring after a brief interval, involves extinction training. Based on findings from the previous NIDA-funded R21, the R-E arm reported a significant 25 percent reduction in cigarettes smoked per day during the follow-up period versus the control NR-E arm.