Nov. 16, 2004 — When used with a transdermal nicotine patch, nortriptyline-an
antidepressant medication-may aid in smoking cessation, according to an article
in the Nov. 8 issue of The Archives of Internal Medicine, a journal of
the American Medical Association.
According to background information in
the article, smoking is an important preventable cause of death. However,
current cessation methods are only partially successful. Several different types
of antidepressant medications have been effective in helping people quit
smoking.
Allan V. Prochazka, M.D., M.Sc., from the University of Colorado
Health Sciences Center, Denver, and colleagues tested the efficacy of
nortriptyline in helping people quit smoking cigarettes. Study participants,
aged 18 to 65 years, were randomly assigned to one of two groups: one group
received nortriptyline (n = 79) and one group received placebo (n = 79).
Researchers started both groups with 25 milligrams per day of either
nortriptyline or placebo 14 days before the set quit date, and then increased
dosage to 75 milligrams per day, as tolerated. A transdermal nicotine patch was
administered to all study participants on the determined quit day and was worn
for eight weeks.
The researchers found that at six months, cessation
rates were 23 percent for those taking nortriptyline and 10 percent for those
taking placebo. Neither group experienced a reduction in withdrawal symptoms.
However, the nortriptyline group had a significantly higher rate of adverse
effects than the placebo group, with 38 percent of participants experiencing dry
mouth and 20 percent experiencing drowsiness. Nortriptyline was discontinued in
13 percent of participants due to adverse effects.
The authors write,
"...there are several possible mechanisms of action for nortriptyline's effect
in enhancing smoking cessation. Nortriptyline may reduce depressive symptoms and
the need for 'negative affect reduction smoking.' Other antidepressant agents
are also effective in smoking cessation, suggesting that the antidepressant
effect may be the common mechanism."
The researchers conclude: "It is
also clear from our data that subjects treated with nortriptyline require close
monitoring for adverse events...However nortriptyline combined with transdermal
nicotine may prove to be a useful alternative for smokers in whom first-line
smoking cessation therapies have failed."
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