A drug that’s been shown to help people quit smoking traditional cigarettes can also help them quit vaping nicotine, a small randomized trial suggests.
In the trial, 160 daily nicotine vapers who had already attempted to quit at least once and were not currently smoking cigarettes were randomly assigned to receive either oral cytisinicline from Achieve Life Sciences or a placebo three times daily for 12 weeks.
Everyone also received weekly behavioral support.
During weeks 9 to 12 of treatment, 32% of participants who received cytisinicline were successfully abstaining from vaping, compared to about 15% of those who received the placebo.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has not yet approved cytisinicline, or any medication, for helping people to stop vaping nicotine, the researchers said on Monday in JAMA Internal Medicine.
An accompanying editorial points out that in the only other randomized trial of a drug to help people quit vaping, varenicline, originally sold by Pfizer under the brand name Chantix, was superior to placebo.
Cytisinicline, however, has fewer side effects than varenicline, the editorial notes.
The drug has been used for decades as a smoking cessation aid by millions in Central and Eastern Europe with a good safety record, the research team noted.
The editorial called the findings “a positive step toward developing targeted interventions to address e-cigarette use,” but said new tools and biomarkers are needed to measure e-cigarette use and determine dosing of treatments.
Nicotine replacement therapies are now dosed on the basis of cigarettes smoked per day, the editorial notes. “Unlike combustible cigarettes… e-cigarettes lack easy visual and quantifiable units” to track nicotine use and concentrations, it said.
Achieve Life Sciences in February said it had agreed with the FDA on requirements for applying for approval of cytisinicline for smoking cessation and nicotine dependence and plans to do so in the first half of the year.
This newsletter was edited by Bill Berkrot; additional reporting by Shawana Alleyne-Morris.