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Doctors Test Vaccine to Help Smokers Quit
JSOnline via AP ^ | July 27, 2006 | Marilyn Marchione

Posted on 07/27/2006 1:44:23 PM PDT by Diana in Wisconsin

MADISON, WI (AP) -- Doctors are testing a radical new way to help smokers quit: a shot that "immunizes" them against the nicotine rush that fuels their addiction.

That pleasurable buzz has seduced Mario Musachia into burning through nearly half a million cigarettes in half a century.

Now the Madison man is among 300 people around the country who are testing an experimental vaccine that makes the immune system attack nicotine in much the same way it would fight a life-threatening germ.

The treatment keeps nicotine from reaching the brain, making smoking less pleasurable and theoretically, easier to give up. The small amount that still manages to get in helps to ease withdrawal, the main reason most quitters relapse.

If it works - and this has not yet been proved - the vaccine could become part of a new generation of smoking cessation treatments. They attack dependency in the brain instead of just replacing the nicotine from cigarettes in a less harmful way, like the gum, lozenges, patches and nasal sprays sold today.

One such drug, Pfizer Inc.'s Chantix, is due on the market any day now. Another, Sanofi-Aventis SA's Acomplia, recently won approval in Europe as a weight-loss drug. If U.S. regulators follow suit, some doctors say they also will use it to help smokers quit, especially those concerned about gaining weight.

"The typical patient is a 30-year-old woman who says, 'If I gain 5 pounds, I'm going back,'" said Dr. J. Taylor Hays, a smoking cessation expert at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., who helped test Chantix and other treatments.

Other novel drugs are in development, but NicVax, by Nabi Biopharmaceuticals, a Boca Raton, Fla., biotech company with labs in Rockville, Md., is most advanced among the vaccines.

After four smaller studies suggested it might be safe and effective, the new, larger study was started in Madison, Minneapolis, Omaha, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Boston and New York City. (People interested in participating must contact the company, but few volunteer openings are left.)

The Food and Drug Administration has granted the vaccine fast-track status, meaning it will get prompt review, and the National Institute on Drug Abuse just gave Nabi a second $4 million grant to finance the study and NicVax's development.

"It's going to be a very good way to keep people from relapsing," predicts Dr. Frank Vocci, director of medications development at the federal institute.

Relapse is the biggest problem quitters face.

Of the more than 48 million smokers in the United States, 40 percent each year make a serious attempt to quit, but fewer than 5 percent succeed long-term. Nicotine replacement products combined with counseling can double that rate, but most quitters don't try them. Two-thirds go back to smoking within a month.

"When they have that first cigarette, if they really enjoy it, they're at high risk of relapse. If you can make that cigarette not so good, you've really got something," Vocci said.

The possibility that a simple shot could do this is what lured Musachia to the Center for Tobacco Research and Intervention on the fringes of the University of Wisconsin-Madison campus earlier this month. He has tried many ways to quit but still smokes.

"I'm sick of it. I'm surprised I've lived this long," said the 75-year-old man. "My kids - they carry on like 2-year-olds when I smoke around them. My animals run and hide."

He and other participants will get four or five shots, either four or six weeks apart, and will be studied for a year. Two-thirds will get the vaccine; the others, dummy shots. Neither they nor the doctors will know who got what until the study ends.

They also will get counseling and must set a quit date, usually around the second shot, because the first shot is just meant to "prime" the immune system. Subsequent doses make it produce antibodies, which latch onto nicotine in the bloodstream and keep it from crossing the blood-brain barrier and getting into the brain where it maintains the addiction.

"They won't get the rush, the reward," but the small amount still getting in "we think is an advantage," because it should lessen withdrawal symptoms, said Dr. Henrik Rasmussen, Nabi's chief medical officer.

The antibodies should remain in the system for up to a year; booster shots may be needed after that, but this needs more study, Rasmussen said.

The new drugs come at a time of heightened attention to helping smokers quit. Last month, the National Institutes of Health held a conference to review the scientific evidence for what smoking cessation techniques work.

Earlier this month, two large scientific conferences were held in Washington, D.C., on the topic.

Research money has increased because of tobacco lawsuit settlements, and insurers increasingly see the health burden of smoking and will pay for cessation treatments that work, said Douglas Jorenby, the psychologist who heads the NicVax study in Madison.

Smokers also are demanding better results than those afforded by traditional nicotine replacement tools. Their desperation sometimes makes them prey to quacks.

The FDA recently moved to block some companies promoting low-power laser therapy, or laser acupuncture, as a way to quit, and a consumer's group is seeking action against a bottled water product that contains nicotine.

"We've got 20 million Americans trying to quit. Among those trying, less than 20 percent are using evidence-based treatments," said Dr. Michael Fiore, director of the tobacco research center in Madison.

The vast majority of these visit a doctor for routine care, yet "few of them, less than a third, leave that encounter with evidence-based advice on how to quit smoking," he lamented.

Regardless of whether the experimental vaccine or other novel approaches ultimately prove successful, they already have had a positive effect - giving some smokers fresh motivation, Jorenby said.

"Every time there's a new treatment for smoking cessation, there are people who have never tried to quit, or haven't tried for a long time, who are going to give it a shot," he said. "People benefit from practice. It usually takes several tries."


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: denial; health; healthcare; pufflist; tobaccoaddicts; wodlist
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To: Young Scholar
Why then do so many people fail to quit even when they really wish to? Or are they just lying about their wish to quit?

I wouldn't say they are lying, but many smokers have given into the anti-smoker's mantra that "all" smokers want to quit but are so addicted they can't.......it becomes a self-fullfilling prophecy based on lies espoused by people who "know what's best" for others.

61 posted on 07/28/2006 5:41:59 AM PDT by Gabz (Taxaholism, the disease you elect to have (TY xcamel))
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To: Gabz

Clearly, lots don't, but there are certainly some who do and have a difficult time. What is less clear is whether they return to smoking because of an addiction, or just a desire to relieve stress.


62 posted on 07/28/2006 5:45:15 AM PDT by Young Scholar
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To: Young Scholar

Did ever occur to you that they must just enjoy it?


63 posted on 07/28/2006 5:50:07 AM PDT by Gabz (Taxaholism, the disease you elect to have (TY xcamel))
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To: Gabz

So if they were to prove that this actually did help some people overcome their addiction to tobacco, you'd be opposed to it?


64 posted on 07/28/2006 5:51:24 AM PDT by Gone GF
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To: Gabz

Then why do they try to quit?


65 posted on 07/28/2006 5:53:11 AM PDT by Young Scholar
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

"Let's follow the money, shall we? ;)"

The really BIG money is in treated smoking related illnesses, not in smoking cessation.


66 posted on 07/28/2006 5:55:14 AM PDT by Gone GF
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To: Gone GF

Since I do not believe tobacco is addictive, there is no answer to your question.


However, I have no opposition to people voluntarily choosing to take such a vaccine, however I do not believe it will remain voluntary, and then I will oppose it.


67 posted on 07/28/2006 5:56:12 AM PDT by Gabz (Taxaholism, the disease you elect to have (TY xcamel))
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To: Young Scholar

Primarily because busybodies have made smokers pariahs in society.


68 posted on 07/28/2006 5:57:12 AM PDT by Gabz (Taxaholism, the disease you elect to have (TY xcamel))
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To: Young Scholar
I quit about 15 years ago. Was 2 packs a day before quiting. It is a physical addiction. I gained weight, my metabolism slowed to nothing. I could have run 3 miles and never broken a sweat. All for about 90 days before returning to normal. It was not fun.

But the way to quit smoking cigarettes is to quit buying and lighting them. It's that simple. You just quit.

69 posted on 07/28/2006 6:00:12 AM PDT by kjam22
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To: Gabz
Since I do not believe tobacco is addictive,

LOL

70 posted on 07/28/2006 6:01:43 AM PDT by kjam22
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To: Gabz

"Since I do not believe tobacco is addictive, there is no answer to your question."

Umm, so why do so many people have such a hard time quitting?


71 posted on 07/28/2006 6:04:12 AM PDT by Gone GF
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To: Gone GF

Some habits are harder to break than others, particularly when one feels one is being forced to do something against one's will.


72 posted on 07/28/2006 6:07:01 AM PDT by Gabz (Taxaholism, the disease you elect to have (TY xcamel))
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To: Gabz
Hey.... You take a person who smokes a couple of packs a day and have them go 6 or 7 hours without a cigarette. They're not as sharp mentally. They're short of breath. They may be shakey of hand. Fidgety. The heart rate may change.

And you think those physical attributes are just do to being without a habit??

73 posted on 07/28/2006 6:11:39 AM PDT by kjam22
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To: kjam22

The only time I ever experienced any such similar phenonmena was when I went from 6 pots of coffee a day to 2 cups.


74 posted on 07/28/2006 6:17:29 AM PDT by Gabz (Taxaholism, the disease you elect to have (TY xcamel))
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To: Gabz

:) I imagine that would to it too!


75 posted on 07/28/2006 6:20:51 AM PDT by kjam22
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To: kjam22

It took several weeks for the problems to finally disappear. That was nearly 20 years ago and to this day I have serious problems later in the day if I happen to have more than 2 cups of coffee in the morning.


76 posted on 07/28/2006 6:28:53 AM PDT by Gabz (Taxaholism, the disease you elect to have (TY xcamel))
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To: Gabz

And there you make the same sort of broad-brushed generalization about people trying to quit that you complain about non-smokers making about smokers. You insult people genuinely trying to improve their lives by quitting by claiming their just giving into social pressure. And yet you complain that non-smokers assume all smokers want to quit.


77 posted on 07/28/2006 7:26:04 AM PDT by Young Scholar
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To: Gone GF
So if they were to prove that this actually did help some people overcome their addiction to tobacco, you'd be opposed to it?

I'm not opposed to it at all.
I'm opposed to the way they are marketing it.
They are, in fact, comparing smoking to being a "disease".
It's one more step in vilifying smokers for no other reason than they smoke tobacco.

This is not a "vaccine". This is a stop smoking help.
A vaccine is meant to give immunity to a "disease".

Smoking is not a "disease". It's a choice.

78 posted on 07/28/2006 7:31:55 AM PDT by Just another Joe (Warning: FReeping can be addictive and helpful to your mental health)
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To: Gabz
Since I do not believe tobacco is addictive, there is no answer to your question.

Denial.

That reminds of the Richard Pryor joke. I've known people who've smoked every day for 30 years, yet they are still not addicted.

79 posted on 07/28/2006 7:55:55 AM PDT by Moonman62 (The issue of whether cheap labor makes America great should have been settled by the Civil War.)
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To: Gone GF
"Since I do not believe tobacco is addictive, there is no answer to your question."

Umm, so why do so many people have such a hard time quitting?

Maybe they like the stench, or the stained fingers and teeth. Others may like chronic bronchitis, emphysema, lung cancer, or bones that won't heal.

And anyone who tries to come up with a treatment to help them quit is part of a conspiracy against them.

80 posted on 07/28/2006 8:03:22 AM PDT by Moonman62 (The issue of whether cheap labor makes America great should have been settled by the Civil War.)
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