Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience, University of Chicago, Chicago IL
2. Emmes Company, Rockville, MD.
Abstract
Abstract
Purpose/Background
People who smoke cigarettes and drink alcohol heavily are less likely to quit smoking compared with those who do not drink heavily. The current study examined the effects of a 12-week treatment phase of combination varenicline and nicotine patch compared with placebo and nicotine patch on smoking cessation (primary outcome) and alcohol consumption (secondary outcome) in heavy drinking smokers at 26-week follow-up.
Methods/Procedures
Participants were daily smokers who met heavy drinking criteria. They were randomly assigned to receive either varenicline and nicotine patch (n = 61) or placebo and nicotine patch (n = 61) for 12 weeks. At week 26, self-reports of point prevalence cigarette abstinence were biochemically confirmed, and past-month alcohol drinking days and heavy drinking days were assessed.
Findings/Results
At week 26, smoking quit rates did not differ by treatment group (25% varenicline and 26% placebo). Relative to week 12 outcomes, week 26 quit rates significantly dropped off in the varenicline group but not in the placebo group. Alcohol drinking reductions for the whole sample that were previously observed from baseline to week 12 were sustained at week 26, although they did not differ between treatment groups.
Implications/Conclusions
In heavy drinking smokers, smoking cessation success was evident in a quarter of the total sample at 3 months postmedication discontinuation. At this time, quit rates were the same between those who received varenicline and nicotine patch and those who received nicotine patch alone. Future research is warranted to examine what may aid in longer-term smoking quit rates in heavy drinking smokers.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Reference50 articles.
1. Biological processes underlying co-use of alcohol and nicotine: neuronal mechanisms, cross-tolerance, and genetic factors;Alcohol Res Health,2006
2. Addiction-related outcomes of nicotine and alcohol co-use: new insights following the rise in vaping;Nicotine Tob Res,2021
3. The subjective effects of alcohol-tobacco co-use: an ecological momentary assessment investigation;J Abnorm Psychol,2011
4. Drinking as a risk factor for sustained smoking;Drug Alcohol Depend,2000
5. Searching for personalized medicine for binge drinking smokers: smoking cessation using varenicline, nicotine patch, or combination nicotine replacement therapy;J Stud Alcohol Drugs,2020