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Vol. 287, Issue 3, 958-962, December 1998
Division of Clinical Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics,
Medical Service, San Francisco General Hospital Medical Center, and the
Departments of Medicine and Psychiatry, University of California, San
Francisco
Nicotine replacement therapy is believed to facilitate smoking
cessation both by relieving withdrawal symptoms and by reducing the
psychological reward from smoking. The latter might occur via down-regulation of nicotine receptors in the brain,
which might require high levels of nicotine exposure. Our study
examined the hypothesis that transdermal nicotine, dosed up to three
times the doses currently recommended for smoking cessation, would
suppress nicotine intake from ad libitum smoking in a
dose-dependent manner. Eleven volunteers with no desire to quit smoking
received placebo or 21, 42, and 63 mg/day transdermal nicotine, with
and without cigarette smoking, in a blinded crossover study. Cigarette
smoking was permitted as desired. Transdermal nicotine suppressed
nicotine intake from cigarette smoking by 3%, 10% and 40% on average
in the 21, 42 and 63 mg/day conditions. The number of cigarettes smoked
per day declined from an average of 17.2 to 12.7 and the intake of
nicotine per cigarette declined from 2.5 to 1.6 mg, comparing placebo
and 63 mg nicotine conditions. Our study results suggest that high-dose
transdermal nicotine has the potential to substantially suppress the
intake of tobacco smoke and could be a useful strategy for smoking
cessation therapy or for reducing the harm caused by smoking.
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