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Drugs help smokers quit, even if
not first time
Washington -
Smokers who use pills to try to kick the habit should keep
trying, even if the drugs do not work at first, a U.S. researcher
advised on Saturday.
It can take several weeks for many
people to fully wean themselves off tobacco, the researcher at
Oregon Health & Science University said in a statement.
"Our recent analysis shows smokers
and clinicians should not be discouraged when total abstinence is
not achieved in the first weeks of treatment with smoking cessation
medications," said David Gonzales, director of the university's
smoking cessation center.
Gonzales presented his work at a
meeting of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco in
Austin, Texas.
Gonzales and colleagues have been
studying how well the drugs Chantix or Zyban work, and published one
study last year. They analyzed this and another study to see if it
took some people longer to quit than others when they used the
drugs.
Varenicline,
marketed as Chantix by Pfizer and bupropion, marketed as Zyban or
Wellbutrin by GlaxoSmithKline, can both help smokers quit and are
licensed for that use. Zyban is an antidepressant and Chantix is
designed to block nicotine in the brain.
Gonzales and colleagues evaluated
Chantix versus Zyban in more than 1,000 smokers from June 2003 to
April 2005 and found Chantix worked better to help people quit.
But no one looked at what would
happen if those who did not succeed kept trying.
"If smokers on medication don't
quit in the first week or two following their target quit date,
clinicians often will instruct their patients to discontinue their
medication. Clinicians consider this a failed attempt," said
Gonzales, who has had contracts with Pfizer, Glaxo and several other
drug companies.
Researchers found that 24 percent
of those taking Chantix were able to quit right away, versus 18
percent taking Zyban and just 10 percent given a placebo.
But an additional 20 percent of
those taking Chantix and 11 percent taking Zyban were able to quit
if they kept trying through three months.
Most experts agree that tobacco is
as addictive as heroin and cocaine, and people often take many tries
before they are able to stop. -- Reuters
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