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Schizophr Res. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2019 April 01.
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aPsychiatry Service, VA Connecticut Healthcare System, 950 Campbell Avenue, West Haven, CT,
06516 USA
bDepartment of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA
cAbraham Ribicoff Research Facilities, Connecticut Mental Health Center, 34 Park Street, New
Haven, CT, 06519 USA
Abstract
One prominent, long-standing view is that individuals with schizophrenia smoke cigarettes more
than the general population to “self-medicate” cognitive deficits and other symptoms. This study
tested the self-medication hypothesis by examining the effects of smoking abstinence and
resumption on cognition in patients with schizophrenia. Nicotine-dependent smokers with
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schizophrenia (n=26) were trained on a cognitive battery and then hospitalized to achieve and
maintain confirmed abstinence from smoking for ~1 week. Cognition was tested while smoking as
usual (baseline), one day after smoking cessation (early abstinence), ~1 week later (extended
abstinence), and within ~3 weeks of resuming smoking (resumption). The test battery included
measures of processing speed, attention, conflict resolution, verbal memory, working memory,
verbal fluency, and executive function to evaluate multiple cognitive domains affected by
schizophrenia. Positive and negative symptoms of schizophrenia, depressive symptoms, and
dyskinesia were also measured at baseline and after prolonged abstinence. There were no
significant changes in global cognitive test performance with smoking cessation, abstinence, or
resumption. There were small decreases in a measure of processing speed and delayed verbal
recall with abstinence, but these findings failed to survive adjustments for multiple comparisons.
Surprisingly, in this within subject “On- Off—Off-On” design, there were no significant effects of
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early or prolonged abstinence from smoking on cognitive and behavioral measures in smokers
with schizophrenia. The results of this study challenge the widely held “self-medication”
Corresponding Author: Deepak Cyril D’Souza, M.D., Psychiatry Service 116A, VA Connecticut Healthcare System, 950 Campbell
Avenue, West Haven, CT 06516, Phone: (203) 932-5711 x 2594 Fax: (203) 937-4860, [email protected].
Publisher's Disclaimer: This is a PDF file of an unedited manuscript that has been accepted for publication. As a service to our
customers we are providing this early version of the manuscript. The manuscript will undergo copyediting, typesetting, and review of
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CONFLICTS OF INTEREST: none of the authors report conflict of interest for this study.
Boggs et al. Page 2
hypothesis of smoking and schizophrenia, question the extent of pro-cognitive effects of smoking
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Keywords
schizophrenia; cognition; smoking; nicotine; tobacco; withdrawal; abstinence
1. INTRODUCTION
The rates of tobacco use and nicotine addiction in schizophrenia are extremely high, with a
recent study showing 70–80% prevalence (Hartz et al., 2014) and some studies showing near
90% prevalence (de Leon and Diaz, 2005; Hughes et al., 1986). Smokers with schizophrenia
have reduced smoking cessation rates, extract more nicotine per cigarette and smoke higher
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numbers of stronger cigarettes, all indicators of greater nicotine dependence than other
smokers (Dalack et al., 1998; de Leon and Diaz, 2005; Hughes et al., 1986). One widely-
held theory about smoking behavior in schizophrenia is the “self-medication hypothesis”
according to which patients smoke tobacco to attenuate positive, negative, depressive or
cognitive symptoms or antipsychotic medication side effects (Kumari and Postma, 2005;
Leonard et al., 2007; Wing et al., 2012). Nicotine or tobacco smoking, however, does not
seem to improve positive psychotic symptoms (Smith et al., 2002), and psychotic symptoms
do not worsen during nicotine withdrawal (Dalack et al., 1999; Yang et al., 2002). More
research interest has been focused on the effects of nicotine on the very disabling negative
symptoms and cognitive deficits of schizophrenia (Smucny et al., 2016; Yee et al., 2015), but
the evidence has been mixed.
Some literature suggests that there are schizophrenia-specific beneficial effects of nicotine
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long-term benefits is unclear (Boggs et al., 2014). Furthermore, though other nicotinic
acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) ligands have been pursued for treating the cognitive deficits
of schizophrenia, unfortunately standardized cognitive test batteries have failed to capture
consistent improvements from these drugs (Boggs et al., 2014). If the self-medication
hypothesis explained the increased smoking in schizophrenia, we would expect smokers
with schizophrenia to have more cognitive gains from smoking and greater cognitive costs of
smoking cessation than otherwise healthy smokers. In addition, the effects of smoking
cessation and withdrawal on cognition do not seem specific to schizophrenia, which further
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2. METHODS
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2.1 Subjects
Data reported here were obtained from subjects who participated in a single- photon
emission computerized tomography (SPECT) imaging study of β2*-nAChR availability in
schizophrenia (D’Souza et al., 2012; Esterlis et al., 2014) that required confirmed inpatient
abstinence from tobacco smoking for ~1 week (mean admission 5.8 days, SD 0.6, range 5–7
days, with reason for variability being coordinating participants’ scheduling with schedule of
imaging procedures reported elsewhere). While some of the methods and the results of
β2*nAChR availability are reported elsewhere (D’Souza et al., 2012; Esterlis et al., 2014),
the principal findings reported here have not been published elsewhere. Eligibility criteria
included: 1) age 18–70 years old; 2) schizophrenia diagnosis confirmed based on DSM-IV
criteria, clinical records, clinician input, and use of the Structured Clinical Interview for
DSM-IV (SCID) (First et al., 1997); 3) cigarette smokers who smoked at least 10 cigarettes
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a day, verified at baseline by a plasma cotinine level >150 ng/ml, urine cotinine level > 100
ng/ml (NicAlert™ by Nymox Pharmaceutical Corporation), and carbon monoxide (CO)
level > 11 ppm (MicroDirect-Micro CO meter (Cat. No. MC02). Exclusion criteria included
1) any other current axis I diagnosis besides schizophrenia; 2) diagnosis of substance abuse
in the past month or substance dependence in the previous 6 months (excluding nicotine and
caffeine); 3) treatment with selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors and/or tetra/tricyclic
antidepressants; 4) psychiatric or medical instability. Lifetime history of and/or current
substance use disorders were ascertained by psychiatric interview, chart review, SCID-I/P,
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2.2.2 Screening—Methods for some aspects of this study have been reported previously
(D’Souza et al., 2012; Esterlis et al., 2014). Subjects who met study criteria had screening
assessments conducted including demographic data, clinical history, clinical ratings
including the Positive and Negative Symptom Scale (PANSS) (Kay et al., 1987), Scale for
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abstinence, and payments were escalated by $25 for every inpatient day. Thus, if subjects
were able to complete the entire inpatient abstinence period of at least 5 days, they were
eligible to receive up to $375. Abstinence from smoking or any other nicotine products was
confirmed by daily breath CO monitoring (cutoff < 8ppm) and urinary cotinine (cutoff < 50
ng/ml) [NicAlert, (Nymox)] (see Supplemental Table 1 for interpretation of assays). In
addition, plasma cotinine was assayed while smoking as usual and after ~1 week of
abstinence. Finally, subjects were aware that failure to abstain triggered discharge from the
study.
2.2.4 Cognitive Test Battery—Multiple domains of cognitive function were tested using
a battery of tests that have been shown to be sensitive to nicotine administration, withdrawal,
and or abstinence in smokers with and without schizophrenia reviewed in (Boggs et al., 2014)
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and normal controls reviewed in (Heishman et al., 2010; Heishman et al., 1993). Furthermore,
the cognitive domains tested, executive functioning, verbal working memory, processing
speed, inhibition, and attention, have been shown to be consistently impaired in
schizophrenia, and thus domains to monitor for sensitivity to nicotine or smoking effects to
test the self-medication hypothesis of smoking in this disorder (Green et al., 2004;
Westerhausen et al., 2011). To minimize practice effects and novelty of cognitive
assessments, subjects were administered the cognitive battery twice on the same day ~2
weeks prior to smoking cessation (Goldberg et al., 2010; Lees et al., 2015). Executive
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control and cognitive inhibition were evaluated with the Stroop Color-Word Test (SCWT)
(Trenerry et al., 1989). Short-term working memory was measured using the Letter Number
Sequencing tasks (LNS) and Digit Span (DS) (Kaplan, 1995; Twamley et al., 2006).
Processing speed was measured using the WAIS-III Digit Symbol Task (DST) and Symbol
Search (SS) tests (Wechsler, 1997). Verbal fluency was measured using the Controlled Oral
Word Association Test (FAS) (Benton et al., 1994). Trail Making Test (TMT) was used to
measure visual tracking (Part A, TMT-A) and executive control (Part B, TMT-B)
(Mitrushina et al., 2005). Immediate and delayed verbal memory were measured using the
Hopkins Verbal Learning Task (HVLT) (Brandt, 1991), and alternative forms were used for
each assessment on this test. Vigilance was measured using the Continuous Performance
Test, Identical Pairs version (CPT-IP) (Cheung et al., 2004) (Tests are further described in
the Supplemental Text and Supplement Table 2). The entire battery took under an hour to
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administer. The order of tests was consistent throughout and was: HVLT-immediate, DSC,
SS, TMT-A, TMT-B, DS, LNS, FAS, SCWT, CPT-IP and finally HVLT-delayed.
hour of smoking, 3) one day after smoking cessation (early abstinence), 4) ~1 week of
smoking abstinence (extended abstinence) and 4) 21 days +/− 3 days (~3 weeks) upon
resumption of smoking within 1 hour of smoking (resumption). Cognitive testing was
performed in the morning. This On-Off-Off-On design provided the opportunity to study the
effects of smoking on cognitive test performance. PANSS, SANS, MADRS and AIMS
testing occurred at baseline while smoking as usual and ~1 week of smoking abstinence
(extended abstinence). Smoking breaks were not permitted during testing.
distribution of baseline scores. Z-scores were computed with these normally distributed
baseline scores as reference, and used to calculate a global cognitive index (GCI) for each
time point for each participant by averaging z scores of cognitive tests’ results (SI, DS, LNS,
DST, SS, TMT-A, TMT-B, FAS, HVLT immediate). For tests where higher performance
corresponds to lower numbers (SI, TMT-A, and TMT-B), z-scores signs were inverted before
averaging. CPT was excluded in the GCI since 7 participants of 26 (~25%) were missing
baseline data on this task for technical reasons; instead, CPT results were analyzed
separately. GCI was calculated both including and excluding (HVLT-delayed) to examine
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the effect of using two measures from the same test (HVLT-immediate and -delayed).
GCI scores were compared over time using linear mixed models with time as a within-
subjects factor. The best-fitting variance-covariance structure was selected based on
information criteria. Post-hoc contrasts with paired t-tests were estimated to interpret
significant main effects of time, comparing each time point to every other. Exploratory
analyses included examining each cognitive measure with the same linear mixed models
with time as a within-subjects factor. Behavioral assessments were compared with paired t-
tests, and Bonferroni corrections were applied for multiple comparisons.
3. RESULTS
3.1 Study Participants
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A total of 26 subjects (23 male) were enrolled in the study and hospitalized (Supplemental
Figure 2), and their demographic data and baseline behavioral assessments are shown in
Table 1. The subjects had at least moderate dependence for nicotine as assessed by the
FTND. Two subjects were unable to comply with the smoking restrictions and dropped out
during the inpatient phase (one subject on the 1st day and one on the 4th day). Of the
remaining 24 subjects, two subjects reported remaining abstinent after discharge from the
hospital and were therefore not asked to return for cognitive testing and another two subjects
were lost to follow up. The remaining 20 subjects returned for repeat cognitive testing within
~3 weeks of resuming smoking (Supplementary Figure 2). Thus, 20 subjects had cognitive
performance data for all 4 time points. Five subjects were not receiving antipsychotic
treatment, 5 were receiving first generation antipsychotics, and 16 were receiving second-
generation antipsychotics, including one receiving clozapine (Supplementary Table 3:
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Prescribed Antipsychotics).
time points except for the GCI with both HVLT measures between baseline smoking and
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All cognitive tests individually were subject to the same modeling for exploratory purposes.
There was a significant effect of time on one processing speed task, the SS task (F(3,65) =
3.53, p = 0.019), as well as on HVLT-delayed recall (F(3,67) = 4.4, p = 0.007). Post-hoc
testing between time points revealed that test performance was worse during early and
prolonged smoking abstinence relative to both smoking as usual at baseline and after
resumption of smoking. There was no main effect of time for the CPT-IP on any CPT-IP
measure, though the number of misses showed a trend for being negatively affected by
smoking abstinence F(3,49)=2.26, p=0.09. However, when Bonferroni corrections for
multiple comparisons (13) were applied (p < 0.004), there are no main effects of time on any
tests, including the SS task and HVLT-delayed recall.
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4. DISCUSSION
This is the first study to our knowledge to study the effects of smoking in the On – Off –
Off- On design in smokers with schizophrenia. Contrary to our hypothesis, neither early nor
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prolonged abstinence from smoking, nor the resumption of smoking, had a significant effect
on cognitive test performance in 1 pack per day heavy smokers with schizophrenia.
Similarly, there were no effects on the core symptoms of schizophrenia, depression or
dyskinesia. The results of this study are not consistent with the widely held view that
smokers with schizophrenia smoke tobacco to “self-medicate” cognitive deficits or other
symptoms associated with schizophrenia.
cognitive deficits. While performance on the 3 of the 13 measures including the SS, HVLT-
delayed recall, and CPT-IP missed trials, showed worsening with abstinence and
improvement with resumption of smoking, these effects were not significant (CPT-IP missed
trials) or did not survive adjustment for multiple comparisons (SS and HVLT-delayed). We
believe that the weak effects of smoking status we have found are non-specific and unlikely
to be clinically significant. Other verbal working memory tests (LNS, DS, and most notably
HVLT-immediate recall) and speed of processing tests (DSC, TMT-A) did not show this
pattern of worsening performance with smoking abstinence, further suggesting that smoking
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status in schizophrenia may not be affecting the performance in these cognitive domains in a
clinically significant manner. It is possible that delayed memory, with delay of 5-up to 60
minutes, is more sensitive to the effects of nicotine than immediate memory in some
individuals with schizophrenia. Similar to our findings, Myers et al found that visuospatial
delayed recognition (5–7 minutes) but not immediate recall was improved in smokers with
schizophrenia by nicotine administration but this may also be an effect of reversing non-
specific acute withdrawal effects, as performance was worse without nicotine in smokers
with schizophrenia versus non-smokers with schizophrenia but improved only in smokers
when nicotine was administered. Attention is often thought to be the domain most improved
with nicotine administration and thus, the lack of any statistically significant effect of
smoking abstinence or resumption on the CPT was surprising especially since some studies
(Barr et al., 2007; Dépatie et al., 2002; Smith et al., 2005) but not others (Boggs et al., 2013;
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Sherr et al., 2002) showed that in smokers with schizophrenia CPT scores improve with
nicotine administration. Studies of decreased nicotine intake in schizophrenia on CPT,
however, have been mixed: Sacco et al found no effects of smoking abstinence on CPT
(Sacco et al., 2005) whereas AhnAllen et al found patients smoking cigarettes with
drastically decreased nicotine content worsened CPT (AhnAllen et al., 2015). Collectively,
the lack of any statistically significant worsening of performance on a battery of commonly
used and well-validated neuropsychological tests suggests that smoking cessation and
nicotine withdrawal may have limited effects on cognition in schizophrenia.
Below herewith, several potential explanations for the discrepancy between the study
findings and expectations based on the “self-medication” hypothesis are explored. First, was
the level of nicotine dependence or smoking severity in this sample insufficient to have
allowed for the manifestation of abstinence-related impaired cognitive test performance?
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The subjects were moderate to heavy smokers whose smoking status (20.3 ± 7.4
cigarettes/day and duration of smoking 24.6 ± 12.8 years) and degree of nicotine
dependence (FTND scores of 5.5 ± 2.1) were confirmed by chart review, self-report and
laboratory testing. Additionally, these levels of smoking in schizophrenia are also consistent
with what have been found in other studies (Wing et al., 2011). Second, could subjects have
failed to abstain? Abstinence from smoking was confirmed by both CO monitoring and
urine cotinine assays – subjects were housed on a locked, smoke-free inpatient research unit
and were paid to attain and maintain abstinence. Furthermore, subjects were not permitted
any nicotine supplements or pharmacological treatments to manage smoking abstinence.
Third, could floor effects in cognitive test performance explain the lack of abstinence-
induced impairments? This appears unlikely given that performance was similar to cognitive
test performance reported in other studies (Schretlen et al, 2007). For example, HVLT total
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immediate recall scores of 19–21 in this study are similar to those seen in other
schizophrenia studies (Schretlen et al., 2007) – with enough room for both declines and
improvements in task performance. Fourth, could practice effects on cognitive test
performance have obscured abstinence-induced worsening? To minimize practice effects
during the periods of abstinence and resumption of smoking, all subjects were trained on the
cognitive test battery on two separate occasions prior to the baseline visit. Fifth, could the
battery have been not sensitive enough to the effects of smoking abstinence? Several of the
tests e.g., STROOP, CPT, and other assessments of processing speed have been shown to be
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sensitive to nicotine effects (Barr et al., 2007; Dépatie et al., 2002; Smith et al., 2005).
Moreover, some of the tests in the battery used e.g., HVLT, are also part of the widely used
MATRICS battery developed for evaluating cognitive treatments for schizophrenia (Green et
al., 2004). Perhaps more proximal measures of brain function e.g., P50 gating, might have
detected abstinence-related effects that could not be detected with the cognitive test battery
(Boggs et al., 2014), but if the commonly used measures of cognitive test performance used
in this study failed to detect the effects of abstinence, the clinical relevance of abstinence
effects is questionable. Finally, while possible, could the lack of effects be explained by
selection bias? It is conceivable that the patients who participated in this study were “aware”
of the lack of significant cognitive impairments with abstinence and thus chose to
participate. This seems unlikely since the overwhelming majority resumed smoking almost
immediately after the required abstinence period.
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movement disorders is consistent with the work of Dalack et al (Dalack et al., 1999). The
findings are also consistent with those of Hahn et al, who reported that the subjective or
objective attentional benefits are unlikely to be the primary driving force of tobacco
consumption in schizophrenia (Hahn et al., 2013.) Our results also parallel the minimal
effects of nicotine on cognition in a rodent neurodevelopmental model of schizophrenia
(Berg et al., 2015). As reported elsewhere (D’Souza et al., 2012; Esterlis et al., 2014), the
same subjects whose cognitive data are reported in this paper showed lower β2*-nAChR
availability relative to smokers without schizophrenia, in striking parallel to the behavioral
and imaging studies done by Berg et al., who found that smoking upregulated β2*-nAChR
in both control and illness-model rodents. In both human schizophrenia and the rodent
model, chronic nicotine use does not completely normalize β2*-nAChR receptor availability,
nor does it substantially affect cognition differently in control and disease condition (Berg et
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experimental studies with alcohol (D’Souza et al., 2006), THC (D’Souza et al., 2005),
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nicotine (Boggs et al., 2013) that failed to demonstrate clear or robust “benefits” on either
positive, negative or cognitive symptoms in schizophrenia; in fact, symptom worsening was
observed with alcohol and THC. Thus, existing experimental evidence does not support the
“self- medication” hypothesis.
A third possible explanation for the association between smoking and schizophrenia is that
smoking itself could increase the risk of developing schizophrenia. In a large Swedish
cohort, smoking in early adulthood predicted later diagnosis of schizophrenia. Furthermore,
in the same study, monozygotic twins non-concordant for smoking status showed higher
rates of non-affective psychosis in the smoking twins, suggesting smoking increases the risk
for psychosis rather than a shared genetic link between smoking and psychosis (Kendler et
al., 2015)
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of cognitive assessments would have been a stronger control for practice effects on the
cognitive battery, which could have been attenuated by abstinence. The assessment of
outcomes relevant to schizophrenia including cognitive measures in multiple domains and
symptoms (e.g., core symptoms (PANSS), depression (MADRS), and movement disorders)
provide a more complete evaluation of possible effects of abstinence. Though the measures
used were broad, other measures, such as measures of neuroplasticity or social functioning,
might be affected in clinically meaningful ways by smoking abstinence, and this should be
studied in the future. There was also not a dedicated measure of visuospatial working
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memory in this battery, though many measures depended upon this domain (CPT, SS, DSC).
Additional measures of visuospatial memory would have been instructive as the literature
about nicotine use on visuospatial working memory in smokers with schizophrenia is mixed
(AhnAllen et al., 2015; Sacco et al., 2005). The sample size of this within- subject study was
larger than or comparable to other studies of nicotine effects and/or abstinence in
schizophrenia.
The study results and the growing literature of small of no effects of smoking withdrawal or
prolonged abstinence on core features of schizophrenia (reviewed in Boggs et al 2014)
challenge the widely held self-medication hypothesis of smoking in schizophrenia (Kumari
and Postma, 2005; Leonard et al., 2007; Wing et al., 2012). Alternative hypotheses are worth
pursuing, not only for understanding why people with schizophrenia smoke, but also for
developing effective treatments for schizophrenia, improved strategies for smoking cessation
for patients, and better ways to prevent psychosis. Most importantly, our results in the
context of prior work suggest that the risks of stopping smoking in schizophrenia are small
compared to the known medical risks of continued smoking (Health and Services, 2004) and
provide strong support for clinicians to encourage smoking cessation in schizophrenia.
Supplementary Material
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Acknowledgments
The authors wish to acknowledge support from the Department of Veterans Affairs. The authors also thank staff of
the Clinical Neuroscience Research Unit of the Connecticut Mental Health Center in caring for patients while they
were hospitalized to achieve abstinence from smoking, and to staff of the Schizophrenia Neuropharmacology
Research Group at Yale (Maegan Krasenics, Lara Shearer and Michelle Carbuto) for their help in collecting the
data.
This research was funded by R01 DA-022495 (D.C.D.) and NARSAD (I.E.). Salary support was provided by
K01MH092681 (I.E.), K02DA031750 (K.C.), and VA VISN1 Career Development Award (T.S.S.).
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Table 1
Variables Mean SD
Age 41.7 11.9
TABLE 2
COGNITIVE TASKS Baseline: Smoking as Immediate Abstinence Extended Smoking Resumption of Smoking Effect over time Post hoc comparisons
Usual (12–24 hours after Abstinence
Boggs et al.
(~21 days)d
(Day #1)a quitting)b (~day 7)c
Global cognitive index 0 (0.641) −0.06 (0.585) −0.05 (0.682) 0.04 (0.676) F(3,67)= 1.02,
p = 0.390
SCWT interference score* 3.68 (8.49) 3.43 (6.07) 3.11 (7.58) 5.71 (7.38) F(3,58)= 0.52,
p = 0.667
WAIS-iii DS score 8.58 (3.11) 8.81 (3.21) 8.63 (3.39) 8.50 (3.02) F(3,67)= 0.58,
p = 0.630
WAIS-iii LNS 8.35 (3.58) 8.15 (3.45) 8.00 (3.55) 8.50 (3.36) F(3,67)= 0.44,
p = 0.723
WAIS-iii DST 6.92 (2.67) 6.73 (2.65) 6.68 (3.00) 7.05 (2.70) F(3,65)= 1.03,
p = 0.387
WAIS-iii SS 7.31 (3.18) 6.65 (2.58) 6.86 (2.82) 7.90 (3.37) F(3,65)= 3.53, d > b (p = 0.004)
p = 0.019 d > c (p = 0.013)
COWAT (FAS) 35.65 (12.26) 33.27 (12.45) 34.08 (11.49) 36.25 (11.28) F(3,67) = 1.32,
p = 0.277
Trails a (sec) 35.65 (18.89) 34.12 (14.57) 32.05 (18.52) 31.75 (12.30) F(3,64)= 0.83,
p = 0.480
Trails b (sec) 114.77 (83.05) 103.00 (59.92) 102.30 (59.62) 98.79 (84.91) F(3,25)= 0.90,
p = 0.454
HVLT total immediate 21.42 (5.78) 19.31 (5.81) 19.79 (4.86) 20.15 (6.27) F(3,67)= 1.67,
p = 0.182
HVLT total delayed 5.42 (2.83) 3.85 (3.09) 4.13 (2.97) 5.35 (2.89) F(3,67)=4.4 a > b (p =0.005)
p = 0.007 a > c (p =0.025)
d > b (p =0.008)
CPT (IP) missed 13.74 (8.05) 16.37 (7.53) 18.89 (9.00) 16.56 (9.62) F(3,49)= 2.26,
p = 0.093
CPT (IP) false alarms 14.63 (15.22) 14.63 (14.47) 17 (19.10) 18.94 (19.77) F(3,49)= 0.54,
p = 0.658
CPT (IP) reaction time (msec) 828 (157) 850 (156) 817 (138) 807 (118) F(3,48)= 0.36
p = 0.784
CPT = Continuous Performance Task, HVLT = Hopkins Verbal Learning Task, SCWT= Stroop Color-Word Test, WAIS-iii = the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-iii, WAIS-iii DS = WAIS-iii Digit Span,
WAIS-iii LNS = WAIS Letter Number Sequencing, WAIS-iii DST = WAIS-iii Digit Symbol Task, WAIS-iii SS = WAIS-iii Symbol Search, COWAT = Controlled Oral Word Association Test, HVLT =
Hopkins Verbal Learning Test, CPT (IP) = Continuous Performance Test (Identical Pairs)
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*
Three participants were colorblind, so they did not ever participante in the SCWT, and their CGIs at all 4 time points did not include SCWT.
Boggs et al.
Table 3
Change in Behavioral and Motor Assessments from Smoking as Usual to Prolonged Smoking Abstinence
PANSS = Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale; SANS = Schedule for the Assessment of Negative Symptoms; MADRS = Montgomery Asberg Depression Rating Scale; AIMs = Abnormal Involuntary
Movement Scale