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Cannabidiol reverses attentional bias to cigarette cues in a human experimental model of tobacco withdrawal
Authors:Chandni Hindocha  Tom P Freeman  Meryem Grabski  Jack B Stroud  Holly Crudgington  Alan C Davies  Ravi K Das  William Lawn  Celia J A Morgan  H Valerie Curran
Institution:1. Clinical Psychopharmacology Unit, University College London, London, UK;2. National Addiction Centre, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King's College London, London, UK;3. School of Experimental Psychology, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK;4. Psychopharmacology and Addiction Research Centre, University of Exeter, Exeter, UK
Abstract:

Background and Aims

Cannabidiol (CBD), a non‐intoxicating cannabinoid found in cannabis, may be a promising novel smoking cessation treatment due to its anxiolytic properties, minimal side effects and research showing that it may modify drug cue salience. We used an experimental medicine approach with dependent cigarette smokers to investigate if (1) overnight nicotine abstinence, compared with satiety, will produce greater attentional bias (AB), higher pleasantness ratings of cigarette‐related stimuli and increased craving and withdrawal; and (2) CBD in comparison to placebo, would attenuate AB, pleasantness of cigarette‐related stimuli, craving and withdrawal and not produce any side effects.

Design

Randomized, double‐blind cross‐over study with a fixed satiated session followed by two overnight abstinent sessions.

Setting

UK laboratory.

Participants

Thirty non‐treatment‐seeking, dependent cigarette smokers recruited from the community.

Intervention and comparator

800 mg oral CBD, or matched placebo (PBO) in a counterbalanced order

Measurements

AB to pictorial tobacco cues was recorded using a visual probe task and an explicit rating task. Withdrawal, craving, side effects, heart rate and blood pressure were assessed repeatedly.

Findings

When participants received PBO, tobacco abstinence increased AB (P = 0.001, d = 0.789) compared with satiety. However, CBD reversed this effect, such that automatic AB was directed away from cigarette cues (P = 0.007, d = 0.704) and no longer differed from satiety (P = 0.82). Compared with PBO, CBD also reduced explicit pleasantness of cigarette images (P = 0.011; d = 0.514). Craving (Bayes factor = 7.08) and withdrawal (Bayes factor = 6.95) were unaffected by CBD, but greater in abstinence compared with satiety. Systolic blood pressure decreased under CBD during abstinence.

Conclusions

A single 800‐mg oral dose of cannabidiol reduced the salience and pleasantness of cigarette cues, compared with placebo, after overnight cigarette abstinence in dependent smokers. Cannabidiol did not influence tobacco craving or withdrawal or any subjectively rated side effects.
Keywords:Abstinence  attentional bias  cannabidiol  cigarette dependence  craving  withdrawal
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