Title: Challenges to Effective Medication Use
1Challenges to Effective Medication Use
- February 19, 2003
- Richard D. Hurt, M.D.Professor of
MedicineDirector, Nicotine Dependence
CenterMayo Clinic - www.mayoclinic.org/ndc-rst
246 y/o Neurosurgeon
- Began smoking age 11, currently smokes 20-30 cpd
- Multiple prior attempts to stop cold turkey,
acupuncture, nicotine patch, hypnosis, bupropion,
and aversion therapy - Withdrawal symptoms anxiety, impatient, craving,
? appetite, and irritability - Longest previous smoking abstinence 2-3 days
- Persistent and chronic cough
346 y/o Neurosurgeon (cont.)
- Admitted for residential treatment, CO25 ppm
- Bupropion 150 bid begun before admission
- Nicotine patch dose 35 mg/d
- Severe cravings and loss of concentrating ability
- Baseline cotinine 621 mg/mL
446 y/o Neurosurgeon (cont.)
- Day 3 Nicotine patch dose ? to 42 mg/d but still
had constant low grade urge to smoke. Add
nicotine gum. - Day 5 Struggling with withdrawal symptoms and
emotional lability. ? patch dose to 63 mg/d.
Steady state cotinine 259 mg/mL.
546 y/o Neurosurgeon (cont.)
- Day 6 Improved. Less emotional lability. Appears
more relaxed. Still has urges. Doesnt recall
very much of the first 3 days after admission.
She critiqued a video on day 2 but had no recall
of that. ? nicotine patch dose to 77 mg/d. - Days 7-8 Comfortable on 77 mg nicotine patch
dose bupropion 6-10 pieces of nicotine gum/d.
646 y/o Neurosurgeon (cont.)
- Week 2 Patch dose reduced to 70 mg/d (2 - 21 and
2 - 14 mg patches) bupropion nicotine gum.
Some emotional lability. - Week 8 Symptoms of depression insomnia, loss
of appetite and some suicidal ideation. She had
?d her dose of bupropion to 200 mg/d at week 4.
Also had ?d nicotine patch dose to 35 mg/d 6
pieces of nicotine gum/d. Returned to work
half-time.
746 y/o Neurosurgeon (cont.)
- Week 13 Her internist had ?d her bupropion dose
to 450 mg/d and added mitrazapine 60 mg/d. Off
nicotine patch therapy. 6 pieces nicotine gum/d. - Week 16 Saw psychiatrist in Rochester. Major
depression in partial remission.
Obsessive-compulsive personality traits. - Weeks 28-40 Begin reducing mitrazapine. Continue
bupropion 450 mg/d but begin reducing week 32.
Nicotine gum 4-6/d. Therapy visit with
psychiatrist every 2 months.
846 y/o Neurosurgeon (cont.)
- Week 48 Had reduced bupropion to 150 mg/d and
mitrazapine to 15 mg/d. ? dysphoria and ?
insomnia ? bupropion to 150 mg/d. Still
vulnerable to reemergence of significant
depression. - Week 52 Bupropion 150 mg BID. Nicotine gum
1-3/d. Therapy visit with psychiatrist. - Week 64 Final therapy session with psychiatrist.
Bupropion 150 mg/d. Mitrazapine 15mg HS. Nicotine
gum 6/d. Dismissed back to her internist.
953 y/o WM Executive
- Smoked cigarettes as early as age 5
- 20 cpd until 1991 MI ? CABG x 3
- 3 mos post-MI relapse to smoking cigarettes
- Switched to pipe I knew I couldnt smoke
cigarettes anymore - Inhaled the pipe smoke from outset
- 3-5 bowls of pipe tobacco per day
1053 y/o WM Executive (cont.)
- Multiple attempts to stop cold turkey never
more than a day - Abstinence with nicotine patch bupropion but
serious w/d symptoms decreased mood, inability
to concentrate, anxiety, and craving - Relapsed during high stress at work
- Admitted for residential treatment Rx bupropion
21 mg nicotine patch
1153 y/o WM Executive (cont.)
- Persistent anxiety symptoms ? ? patch dose to 2
- 21 mg patches - PFT COPD
- Baseline cotinine 516 ng/ml, steady state 265
ng/ml - ? patch dose to 3 - 21 mg patches NNS ? less
anxiety symptoms - Dismissed on 3 - 21 mg nicotine patch dose
bupropion ad lib nicotine gum and NNS for crises
12Hurt RD, et al. Clin Pharmacol Ther 5498-106,
1993
13Lawson GM, et al. J Clin Pharmacol 38502-509,
1998
14High Dose Patch TherapyConclusions
- High dose patch therapy safe for heavy smokers
- Smoking rate or blood cotinine to estimate
initial patch dose - Assess adequacy of nicotine replacement by
patient response or percent replacement - More complete nicotine replacement improves
withdrawal symptom relief - Higher percent replacement may increase efficacy
of nicotine patch therapy
15Therapeutic Drug Monitoring
- Clinicians recognize limitations of empirical
dosing (standard or fixed dose regimens) - Clinical observations have led to individualizing
patient drug doses - Allows scientific approach to selecting drug
regimen to achieve targeted serum concentration - Serum drug analyses are critical adjunct to
optimal therapeutic drug utilization
16Pharmacotherapy for Tobacco DependenceMultifactor
al Problem
- Relatively few medications
- Virtually no changes in existing medications
since introduction - ONE new medication (nicotine lozenge) introduced
in past 5 years - Multiple barriers to use clinicians, patients,
payers, tobacco industry
17Pharmacotherapy for Tobacco DependenceClinicians
- Lack of familiarity with and understanding of
existing medications - Concern about safety overdosing and abuse
liability - Perceived low efficacy
18Pharmacotherapy for Tobacco DependencePatients
- Low self-esteem and embarrassment
- Expense
- Inadequate relief of withdrawal and craving
- Concern about safety underdosing and short
duration of use - Hard to use products gum, inhaler, nasal spray
- Pharmaceutical marketing focus on competition
rather than the problem
19Pharmacotherapy for Tobacco DependencePayers
- Perceived low efficacy
- Concern about costs fear of herd effect
- Perception it is the patients responsibility
choice and self-quitting - Not buying cigarettes should offset cost to
patient
20Pharmacotherapy for Tobacco DependenceTobacco
Industry
- Highly sophisticated products and marketing
- Underregulated and politically protected
- Enormous resources and pervasive influence
- Constantly preempting or adapting to public
health environment - Morally and ethically bankrupt
21Pharmacotherapy for Tobacco DependenceNicotine
Withdrawal Syndrome
- Needs to be revisited with more scientific vigor
- Spectrum of symptoms is broader than presently
defined - Better understanding of neurophysiology of
withdrawal and craving - Pharmacotherapy targeted toward withdrawal and/or
craving
22Pharmacotherapy for Tobacco DependenceIdeal Drug
- High efficacy withdrawal and craving relief,
tobacco abstinence plus relapse prevention - Few side effects
- Easy to administer
- Long duration of action
- Positive ancillary effects no weight gain or
weight loss, improved mood, eliminates wrinkles