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Anti-Smoking Vaccine Tested
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."●
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