Stay Informed

Sign up for news & alerts

Already signed up?
Login here
What Can I Do?


Get Help
Need alcohol or drug help for yourself or someone else? GET HELP
Resources
Resources
Find useful publications, online documents & more.


DrugScreening.org


 

Research Reveals Little Benefit from Stop-Smoking Drugs
March 13, 2008

Email
Email
Print
Print
SubscribeSubscribe
News Summary

Studies sponsored by the pharmaceutical companies selling stop-smoking drugs provide scant evidence of effectiveness in helping smokers achieve long-term abstinence, CNN reported March 12.

Drugs like Pfizer's Chantix and GlaxoSmithKline's Zyban seem to help some smokers quit initially, the success rate drops significantly over time, studies show. "The drugs are approved because they've shown in FDA studies that they're better than placebo," said researcher Edward Levin of the Duke University Medical Center in Raleigh, N.C. "But being better than placebo doesn't take a whole lot, so there really is room for improvement."

For example, about half of smokers using Chantix were able to quit when studied at 12 weeks, but only one in four remained abstinent a year after taking the drug, compared to one in 10 study subjects given a placebo. Among Zyban patients, 14.6 percent were abstinent at one year, compared to 10.3 percent of the placebo group.

"There's nothing out there now that you can take that will make you not smoke," said David Gonzales, co-director of the Smoking Cessation Center at the Oregon Health & Science Center, who has studied both Chantix and Zyban. "That's what people think these drugs do, but they don't do that. The drugs do a reasonable job with suppressing withdrawal, but they don't teach people how not to smoke." 

"The patient may have to go through this quitting process many times," said Martina Flammer, senior medical director of Pfizer's Chantix group. "It is inherent of the nature of nicotine addiction that the patient may actually relapse."

Both drugs also carry the risk of increased suicidal ideation and behavior, the FDA warns. Still, Pfizer sold $888 million worth of Chantix in 2007, and the total market for antismoking therapies is projected to grow to $4.6 billion by 2016.

COMMENTS ON THIS ARTICLE:

Posted by Peter O'Loughlin on 17 Mar 08 03:19 PM EDT
Treating any addiction from a single dimension, ignores the fact that all addictions are three dimensional. Whilst pharmacotherapy can address the physical aspects of quitting, it is not able, nor intended to address the psychological aspects, the fact that it is highly unlikely that the subconsious mind is ever entirely free of the thought of using any drug(s) to which one has become addicted. If we insist on treating the addiction, rather than the addict, we cannot expect resounding, or lasting success. We also know from the excellent work of Prochaska & DiClemente, that the vast majority of those who successfuly quit smoking do so without any psycho social or pharmacological interventions. The same model indicates that those who leap from the 'contemplation' stage into the 'action' stage are more likely to relapse, than those who who make preparation for the deprivation that is an inescapable part of quitting. In ignoring that knowledge in the hope that a 'silver bullet' is going to effortlessly transport us from addiction to abstinence, we are conforming to Einstein's definition of insanity; 'continung to do the same thing whilst expecting a different result'.

Posted by John from Oceanside on 17 Mar 08 01:55 PM EDT
I got the quiting part down. I just have to quit chewing Nicotine Gum. After 14 years of chewing it I'm a poor man. Boy I sound like someone who uses metadone.

Posted by John C. Roitzsch, PhD on 17 Mar 08 10:52 AM EDT
This report seems to add to the growing list of reports and studies that medications likely have a place in helping someone stop using nicotine , but that professional counselling is necesssary to help someone maintain abstinence or reduction in use.

Posted by Oscar Lovelace, MD on 15 Mar 08 09:00 PM EDT
You report "about half of smokers using Chantix were able to quit when studied at 12 weeks, but only one in four remained abstinent a year after taking the drug, compared to one in 10 study subjects given a placebo." - should read one in four miraculously remain smoke free one year after taking Chantix for 12 weeks, far better than one in ten who took a placebo for 12 weeks. 25% is 2.5 times better than 10%. Considering the fact that smoking is America's number one preventable cause of death - think of the impact if more smokers were treated with Chantix.

Posted by Jim Hanlon on 15 Mar 08 08:28 AM EDT
Let me see if I have this right(1) The FDA approved these drugs with nothing more in the way of a scientific study than the outome reported that they did better than the placebo. But now(2)As Ramona writes this "This is not a peer reviewed study" refering to the CNN and "we know that these meds. are still best practices"? I pray too God in heaven that Ramona is not a doctor and if you are my dear, well Quack!, Quack!, Quack!

Posted by Ramona on 14 Mar 08 01:16 PM EDT
I am sick to death of people interpreting what tobacco cessation is, without understanding an inkling of what addiction is all about, especially nicotine addiction.

Posted by talamonij on 14 Mar 08 11:23 AM EDT
"The drugs do a reasonable job with suppressing withdrawal, but they don't teach people how not to smoke.", Gonzalez said. People who quit have to perform a new self as a "not-smoking-self" insted of the "smoking-self" that result after few cigarettes smoked -as Big Tobacco knows.

Posted by Ramona on 14 Mar 08 10:17 AM EDT
I agree. This is not a peer-reviewed study, and we know that these medications are best practice. As long as there is no vaccine, I will continue to recommend these meds along with counseling for my clients. We all know that it takes several times before a person is able to quit successfully!!! Quitting takes practice.

Posted by Carlton Erickson, Ph.D. on 14 Mar 08 10:02 AM EDT
Since this was a CNN report and not a peer reviewed study, I wonder if the reporters asked the researchers about outcomes when counseling is paired with the medications. No anti-dependence medication is a magic bullet, and studies show that concurrent counseling is better than just the medication alone for improving long-term outcomes.

Posted by Mady Chalk, PH.D. on 14 Mar 08 09:45 AM EDT
Well, how silly is this. Of course these medications have little to do with long-term abstinence. But they DO suppress withdrawal symptoms and that is no mean feat. I guess we will have to wait a few years for the nicotine vaccine.

Your Turn! Post a public comment (guidelines):

Name:

Comment:
(limit 200
words)

Enter this word
(help):
Change

GUIDELINES:
Comments are meant for thoughtful public discussion of the article published above. Therefore:

  1. Keep it clean, courteous, focused, and on-topic.

  2. Do not post personal requests for help (see resources).

  3. Proof your comments carefully for spelling and punctuation, and don't use ALL CAPS. Comments are published immediately and cannot be edited.

  4. Deceptive, slanderous and commercially-motivated comments are prohibited.

We reserve the right to remove comments not conforming to these guidelines. (Report a comment).

Have questions or feedback? Contact us.