Smoking cessation

Varenicline Effective for Smoking Cessation After Heart Attack

Varenicline is safe and effective for smoking cessation through 52 weeks of use among patients with acute coronary syndrome (ACS), according to a recent study.

In the EVITA trial, researchers assessed 302 participants who were hospitalized for ACS. Each participant was randomly assigned to 12-week smoking cessation treatment with varenicline or placebo, along with low-intensity counseling.
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Seven-day recall was used to evaluate smoking abstinence, and biochemical validation was performed using exhaled carbon monoxide.

Smoking abstinence rates decreased as the trial progressed. Approximately 34.4% of participants were still abstinent at 52 weeks post-ACS.

Based on estimates, varenicline use vs placebo was likely associated with increased point-prevalence abstinence (39.9% vs 29.1%), continuous abstinence (31.1% vs 21.2%), and reduction in cigarette smoking by 50% or more (57.8% vs 49.7%)

Similar rates of adverse events (24.5% vs 21.9%; risk difference: 2.7%) and major adverse cardiovascular events (8.6% vs 9.3%) were observed between groups.

“Varenicline was efficacious for smoking cessation in this high-risk patient population,” the researchers concluded. “However, 60% of patients who received treatment with varenicline still returned to smoking.”

—Christina Vogt

Reference:

Windle SB, Dehghani P, Roy N, et al. Smoking abstinence 1 year after acute coronary syndrome: follow-up from a randomized controlled trial of varenicline in patients admitted to hospital. CMAJ. 2018;190(12):E347-E354. https://doi.org/10.1503/cmaj.170377.