Yes, extensive research has shown that
behavioral and pharmacological treatments for nicotine addiction do work. For those
individuals motivated to quit smoking, a combination of behavioral and pharmacological
treatments can increase the success rate approximately twofold over placebo treatments.
Furthermore, smoking cessation can have an immediate positive impact on an individual's
health; for example, a 35-year-old man who quits smoking will, on the average, increase
his life expectancy by 5.1 years.
Nicotine Replacement Treatments
Nicotine was the first pharmacological agent approved by the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) for use in smoking cessation therapy. Nicotine replacement therapies,
such as nicotine gum, the transdermal patch, nasal spray, and inhaler, have been approved
for use in the United States. They are all used to relieve withdrawal symptoms, produce
less severe physiological alterations than tobacco-based systems, and generally provide
users with lower overall nicotine levels than they receive with tobacco. An added benefit
is that these forms of nicotine have little abuse potential since they do not produce the
pleasurable effects of tobacco products. Nor do they contain the carcinogens and gases
associated with tobacco smoke.
The FDA's approval of nicotine gum in 1984 marked the availability (by prescription) of
the first nicotine replacement therapy on the U.S. market. In 1996, the FDA approved gum
(Nicorette") for over-the-counter sales. Whereas nicotine gum provides some smokers
with their desired control over dose and ability to relieve cravings, others are unable to
tolerate the taste and chewing demands. In 1991-1992, FDA approved four transdermal
nicotine patches, two of which became over-the-counter products in 1996, thus meeting the
needs of many additional tobacco users.
Since the introduction of nicotine gum and the transdermal patch, estimates based on
FDA and pharmaceutical industry data indicate that more than 1 million individuals have
been successfully treated for nicotine addiction. In 1996 a nicotine nasal spray, and in
1998 a nicotine inhaler, became available by prescription. All the nicotine replacement
products - gum, patch, spray and inhaler - appear to be equally effective. In fact, the
over-the-counter availability of many of these medications, combined with increased
messages to quit smoking in the media, has produced about a 20 percent increase in
successful quitting each year.
Non-Nicotine Therapies
Although the major focus of pharmacological treatments of nicotine addiction has been
nicotine replacement, other treatments are being developed for relief of nicotine
withdrawal symptoms. For example, the first non-nicotine prescription drug, bupropion, an
antidepressant marketed as Zyban", has been approved for use as a pharmacological
treatment for nicotine addiction. In December 1996, a Federal advisory committee
recommended that the FDA approve bupropion to become the first drug to help people quit
smoking that could be taken in pill form, and the first to contain no nicotine.
Behavioral Treatments
Behavioral interventions can play an integral role in nicotine addiction treatment.
Over the past decade, this approach has spread from primarily clinic-based, formal
smoking-cessation programs to application in numerous community and public health
settings, and now by telephone and written formats as well. In general, behavioral methods
are employed to (a) discover high-risk relapse situations, (b) create an aversion to
smoking, (c) develop self-monitoring of smoking behavior, and (d) establish competing
coping responses.
Other key factors in successful treatment include avoiding smokers and smoking
environments and receiving support from family and friends. The single most important
factor, however, may be the learning and use of coping skills for both short- and
long-term prevention of relapse. Smokers must not only learn behavioral and cognitive
tools for relapse prevention but must also be ready to apply those skills in a crisis.
Although behavioral and pharmacological treatments can be extremely successful when
employed alone, science has taught us that integrating both types of treatments will
ultimately be the most effective approach. More than 90 percent of the people who try to
quit smoking relapse or return to smoking within 1 year, with the majority relapsing
within a week. There are, however, an estimated 2.5 to 5 percent who do in fact succeed on
their own. It has been shown that pharmacological treatments can double the odds of their
success. However, a combination of pharmacological and behavioral treatments further
improves their chances. For example, when use of the nicotine patch is combined with a
behavioral approach, such as group therapy or social support networks, the efficacy of
treatment is significantly enhanced.