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Pharmacotherapy for Smoking Cessation Dave Davidson B.Sc., M.D.,C.M., C.C.F.P.(EM), F.C.F.P. Department of Family Medicine, University of Ottawa Pharmacotherapy for Smoking Cessation 42 nicotine receptor blocker antidepressants nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) Pharmacotherapy for Smoking Cessation - 2 Evidence for effectiveness Tolerability Key prescribing information Practical issues how to choose combinations cost Deaths Attributed to Smoking Tobacco Combined Preventable Deaths Suicides Car Accidents Alcohol Murders 0 5000 10000 15000 20000 25000 30000 35000 40000 45000 50000 varenicline (Champix) approved for use in Canada this year first pharmaceutical agent designed for smoking cessation starting point was cytisine, a plant derived 42 receptor agonist used in Eastern Europe by smokers trying to quit varenicline 42 receptor acetylcholine (nicotinic) receptor in the reward centre of the brain (nucleus accumbens) when stimulated by smoked nicotine the 42 receptor releases dopamine The Brain Le Foll, B. et al. CMAJ 2007;177:1373-1380 Copyright ©2007 Canadian Medical Association or its licensors Varenicline - 2 designed to be a selective 42 receptor partial agonist & partial antagonist varenicline has 35 – 60% of nicotine’s agonist effect on dopamine release in the brain varenicline is a competitive antagonist with more affinity for the 42 receptor than nicotine So what…? through its partial agonist and partial antagonist effect on the nicotine receptor varenicline stimulates enough release of dopamine to decrease craving and withdrawal while also blocking the pleasurable effects of smoked nicotine. Nides, M et al. Arch Intern Med; Vol 16, Aug 14/28, 2006 But does it work…? 2 identical RCTs varenicline vs. bupropion vs. placebo 1000+ subjects randomized in each study age 40s, 50 – 60% men, ~80% white, ~20 cigarettes per day for 24 years 12 weeks of study drug Gonzales, D et al. JAMA, Vol 296, No. 1, July 5, 2006 Varenicline, does it work…? primary end point; 4-week continuous abstinence rate for weeks 9 – 12 secondary end points continuous abstinence rates weeks 9 – 24 and weeks 9 – 52 weight change measures (questionnaires) of craving, withdrawal, and smoking reinforcement Jorenby, DE et al, JAMA, Vol 296, No. 1, July 5, 2006 Varenicline, does it work? abstinence = not a single puff within the measurement period; confirmed by expired CO </= 10 ppm Continuous Abstinence rates Gonzales, D. et al. JAMA 2006;296:47-55. Copyright restrictions may apply. 7-Day Point Prevalence Abstinence Gonzales, D. et al. JAMA 2006;296:47-55. Copyright restrictions may apply. Effects on Craving, Withdrawal & Smoking Satisfaction Craving both reduced craving but varenicline had twice the effect (moderate effect size) both reduced urge to smoke but varenicline had twice the effect size Effects on Craving, Withdrawal & Smoking Satisfaction - 2 Withdrawal Both reduced the negative affect associated with quitting about equally varenicline reduced restlessness (small effect size) varenicline increased appetite cf. bupropion (small effect size) Effects on Craving, Withdrawal & Smoking Satisfaction - 3 Smoking Satisfaction varenicline & bupropion both had a moderate effect on reducing smoking satisfaction & psychological reward after smoking while taking the drug Tolerability Varenicline nausea (28.1%) headache (15.5%) insomnia (14.0%) abnormal dreams (10.3%) Bupropion insomnia (21.9%) headache (14.3%) nausea (12.5%) seizures (n=1) Antidepressants for Smoking Cessation Effectiveness As sole pharmacotherapy bupropion and nortriptyline both double the odds of cessation bupropion (31 trials; OR 1.94, 95% CI, 1.72 to 2.19) nortriptyline (4 trials; OR 2.34, 95% CI 1.61 to 3.41) Antidepressants for Smoking Cessation - 2 their effect is not restricted to people with a history of depression or depressive symptoms during smoking abstinence insufficient evidence that adding either bupropion or nortriptyline to NRT provides an additional long-term benefit Antidepressants for Smoking Cessation - 3 equal in effectiveness to NRT pooled data from 3 trials comparing bupropion to varenicline showed a lower odds of quitting with bupropion (OR 0.60, 95% CI, 0.46 TO 0.78) nortriptyline is not approved in Canada for smoking cessation Antidepressants for Smoking Cessation - 4 SSRIs 4 trials of fluoxetine 1 trial of sertraline 1 trial of paroxetine none showed significant effectiveness in smoking cessation alone or when pooled Atypical Antidepressants 1 trial of venlafaxine showed no benefit MAOs 1 trial of moclobemide showed no effect Tolerability - 2 bupropion nortriptyline insomnia dry mouth nausea about 1 in 1000 risk of seizures risk of suicide is unproven dry mouth constipation nausea sedation dangerous in overdose Hughes, JR et al. Cochrane Collaboration, January 2007 NRT for Smoking Cessation Pooled odds ratios for abstinence with NRT from 103 controlled trials was 1.77 (95% CI, 1.66 to 1.88) Gum 1.66 (95% CI, 1.52 to 1.81) Patches 1.81 (95% CI, 1.63 to 2.02) Lozenge 2.05 (95% CI, 1.62 to 2.59) Inhaler 2.14 (95% CI, 1.44 to 3.18) NRT for Smoking Cessation - 2 Gum fixed dose or ad lib heavy smokers (>30 cigarettes/day) benefit from the 4mg pieces side-effects hiccups, GI disturbances, jaw pain, dental problems NRT for Smoking Cessation - 3 Patches eight weeks of patch therapy is as effective as longer courses no evidence that tapered therapy is better than abrupt withdrawal wearing the patch only during waking hours is as effective as wearing it for 24 hours a day NRT for Smoking Cessation - 4 Patches evidence of a small additional benefit from using the patch in combination with ad lib use of the gum or inhaler evidence supports using more than one patch at a time in heavy smokers or those who relapse because of craving and withdrawal symptoms on standard dose therapy repeated courses of NRT in those who relapse after using the patch produces a small additional probability of quitting NRT for Smoking Cessation - 5 Patches side-effects skin irritation in up to 54% but rarely leads to withdrawal of patch use no evidence of increased risk of cardiac events in patients with known CV disease NRT for Smoking Cessation - 6 Lozenge 1mg if smoking less than 20/day; 2mg if smoking more than 20/day suck & park 10 – 12 per day for most people absorbed through buccal mucosa ad lib use instead of smoking takes about 30 minutes to dissolve NRT for Smoking Cessation - 7 Inhaler nicotine 10mg/canister 4mg delivered to the throat & oral mucosa 2mg absorbed side-effects throat irritation, coughing, oral burning Silagy, C et al, Cochrane Collaboration, July 2004 Pharmacotherapy for Prevention of Relapse 50 – 60% of initially successful quitters go on to relapse within a year Pharmacotherapy for Prevention of Relapse - 2 nicotine gum 2 trials found a small effect; (n=2261: OR, 1.30; 95% CI, 1.06-1.61) bupropion no effect when data from two trials pooled: (n=605; OR, 1.25; 95% CI, 0.86-1.81) Pharmacotherapy for Prevention of Relapse - 3 “Varenicline is the first smoking cessation treatment to demonstrate a (clinically) significant long-term relapse prevention effect.” Tonstad, S et al. JAMA, Vol 296, No.1, July 5, 2006 Seven-Day Point Prevalence of Abstinence Copyright restrictions may apply. Pills or NRT to Quit? Effectiveness? 3 studies show that varenicline is more effective than bupropion only varenicline helps prevent relapse with an additional 12 weeks of Rx no evidence to choose bupropion or nortriptyline over NRT or vise versa Pills or NRT to Quit? - 2 Drug smoking varenicline bupropion nortriptyline nicotine gum nicotine patch nicotine inhaler nicotine lozenge Dose for 12 wks 1 pack/day 1 mg BID 150 mg BID 75-100 mg daily 2 or 4 mg PRN 1 OD x 10 weeks 6 – 12 cart. OD PRN 1 or 2 mg PRN Approx. Cost $670 $325 $180 $50 - 84 $115 - 210 $230 - 300 $280 - 550 $110 - 290 Pills or NRT to Quit? - 3 Patient factors? The smoker’s level of dependence on nicotine influences NRT effectiveness heavy smokers (>30 cigarettes/day) benefit from higher doses of nicotine replacement e.g. 4mg gum vs 2mg or combinations of NRT limited evidence of NRT effectiveness in those who smoke less than 10-15 cigarettes a day Pills or NRT to Quit? - 4 In closing… Most patients will tell you what they want so be guided by their preferences and past experiences with quitting. Varenicline is generally more effective than bupropion or NRT & appears to be safe. Consider the side effect profile; NRT – few SE, none serious bupropion – insomnia (common), seizures (rare) varenicline – nausea (common) To avoid weight gain bupropion might be a better choice between the pills History of seizure disorder or anything that lowers seizure threshold eliminates bupropion