Title: Tobacco Cessation
1Tobacco Cessation
2In Kuwait
- 5 STEMIs in pts lt 35 yo
- Only risk factor
- TOBACCO USE
330 yo male
- No risk factors
- Your risk of having a cardiovascular event in the
next 10 years is lt 1. - Smoking
- Your risk of having a cardiovascular event in the
next 10 years is 2. - Hypertension
- Your risk of having a cardiovascular event in the
next 10 years is 2. - Hyperlipidemia (total 240, HDL 40)
- Your risk of having a cardiovascular event in the
next 10 years is 2. -
http//www.med-decisions.com/cvtool/active/patient
/riskcalc.php
4- How much time/effort do we spend checking liver
panels for statins? - How many visits are follow-up for bp checks?
- How many GI bleeds are caused by ASA primary
prevention? - How much time do YOU spend talking about tobacco?
- How many times do YOU document it as a problem?
- Do you even think it is YOUR problem to address??
5Physician Advice ???
- 1989-1990 52 of smokers received counseling
- 3.6 surveyed said physicians helped them quit
- 1998-99 survey 64 of smokers in Wisconsin
received advice to quit
Frank E. Predictors of physician smoking
cessation advice. JAMA 1991266(22)3139-3144 Marbe
lla et. Al. Wisconsin physicans advising smokers
to quitWMJ 2003102(5)41-45
6Paradigm shiftWe need to consider
- Tobacco dependence as a chronic problem
- Tobacco dependence as important as HTN,
Hyperlipidemia - Tobacco dependence as a problem we must address
7- Why is tobacco so bad?
- Does quitting really make a difference?
- How do we get people to quit??
8Does Cigarette smoke affect atherosclerosis?
- Increase plaque in aorta seen on TEEs in smokers
- ARIC trial looked at gt 10,000 pts carotid intimal
thickness over 3 year period - Smokers gt 50 increase in thickness
- Secondhand smokers gt 20 increase
JAMA 1998 279 (2) 119
9HOW does cigarette smoking do this?
- Modification of Lipids
- Vasomotor dysfunction
- Inflammation
- Prothrombotic
Ambrose JA, Barua RS. The pathophysiology of
cigarette smoking and cardiovascular disease
JACC 43 (10) 2004 1731-1737
10Modification of Lipids
- Smokers generally have higher LDL/TG
- Smokers generally have lower HDL
- Increases oxidative modification of LDL
- Actively taken up by macrophages ? foam cells
11Vasomotor dysfunction
- Decreased vasodilatory function
- Decreased NO availability
- Endothelial cells exposed to smokers sera
- Smoking alters the expression and activity of
endothelial NO synthase enzyme - NO also thought to regulate cytokines/inflammation
12Inflammation
- CS increased WBC, CRP, TNF-a, and IL-6
-
- Endothelium
- Increased leukocyte recruitment
- Higher levels of ICAM-1, VCAM-1
- Cell-cell interaction
- CSE 70-90 increase in adherence of monocytes to
umbilical cells in culture - CSE 200 increase in rate of transendothelial
migration of monocyte-like cells across umbilical
cell monolayer - Smoking fuels the fire of inflammation in the
blood and at the vessel wall
13Prothrombotic
- Platelet dysfunction
- Increased stimulated/spontaneous aggregation
- Decreased availability of platelet-derived NO
- Prothrombotic
- Higher fibrinogen, tissue factor levels
- Decreased TF pathway inhibitor-1 (TFPI-1) levels
- Decreased fibrinolysis
- Decreased basal and substance-P-stimulated t-PA
release
14- Lipid metabolism
- Helps create foam cells, facilitate initiation of
plaque - Vasomotor dysfunction
- Vasoconstriction, less vasodilation
- Inflammation
- fuels the fire of inflammation in the blood and
at the vessel wall - Thrombosis
- dysfunctional thrombo-hemostatic mechanism(s)
that promote the initiation and/or propagation of
thrombus formation and limit its effective
dissolution.
15- Modification of Lipids -- STATINS
- Vasomotor dysfunction NTG, etc
- Inflammation -- STATINS, ASA
- Prothrombotic ASPIRIN, PLAVIX
Ambrose JA, Barua RS. The pathophysiology of
cigarette smoking and cardiovascular disease
JACC 43 (10) 2004 1731-1737
16.
17What about smokeless tobacco or secondhand smoke?
- INTERHEART study
- Smokeless OR 2.23 (1.41-3.52)
- Smoking smokeless OR 4.09 (2.98-5.61)
- Secondhand smoke
- OR1.24 (1.17-1.32) for low exposure (lt7
hrs/week) - OR1.62 (1.45-1.81) for high exposure
(gt21hrs/week)
18Does Quitting Make a Difference?
19.
20It is never too late to quit
Vollset et. Al. Annals of Internal Medicine 2006
144(6) 381-389
21Short term results
Teo et al. INTERHEART Lancet 2006 368647-658
22Our population
23What can we do??
- Brief counseling
- Pharmacotherapy
- Behavioral therapy
- Combined approaches
24lt 3 minutes counseling.
- Brief advice vs. no advice
- 2.5 absolute difference in cessation rate
- 2.5 success 10,000 pts ? 250 pts tobacco free
- 20 success with formal program ?
- 1250 pts have to complete program to yield 250
pts tobacco free
Silagy, C. Stead, LF. Cochrane databaseSyst
Rev 2006 (3)
25Impact of Physicians Advice to Quit (n 7
studies)
Odds Ratio (95) CI
Estimated Abstinence Rate
Advice
No advice to quit (reference group)
7.9
1.0
Physician advice to quit
10.2
1.3 (1.1-1.6)
26Efficacy of Interventions Delivered by Various
Types of Clinicians (n 29 Studies)
Estimated Abstinence Rate
Odds Ratio (95) CI
Type of Clinician
No clinician (reference group)
10.2
1.0
1.1 (0.9-1.3)
10.9
Self-help
Non-physician clinician
1.7 (1.3-2.1)
15.8
19.9
2.2 (1.5-3.2)
Physician clinician
27pharmacotherapy
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29Smoking Cessation Pharmacotherapy
Pharmacotherapy combined with behavioral support
provides the best success rate
Other nicotine replacement therapy options
include nicotine gum, lozenge, inhaler, nasal
spray
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31PharmacotherapyNicotine Replacement Therapy
(NRT)
- Nicotine patch most extensively studied
- Nicotine patch reduces thrombosis profile
- 164 pts vs. 33 controls and patch and gum
- Improvements in fibrinogen levels, HCT, WBC and
reactive capillary blood flow at 6 months among
abstainers - Nicotine patch reduces coronary vasospasm
- Known smokers in cath lab vasoconstriction to
cold pressors, but no change with nicotine gum
Joseph AM, Fu SS. Safety issues in
pharmacotherapy for smoking in patients with
cardiovascular disease Progress in
Cardiovascular Disease 2003 45 (6) 429-441
32What about pts with CAD?
- Is it safe?
- 21 mg patch no hemodynamic/procoagulant effect
- No significant change in HR, BP, fibrinogen,
lipid levels in long term smokers
Mahmarian et al JACC 1997 30(1) 125-130
33- 40 pts (35 men)
- known CAD
- 1 ppd hx
- gt 5 defect on ETT-thallium
- Anti-anginals stopped
- Exclusion PTCA/bypass lt 3 months prior
- Valvular disease, unstable angina
34What about pts s/p MI??
- Multicenter, gt 45 yo
- h/o MI, PTCA, CABG
- OR
- CHF, cor pulmonale, arrhythmia, PVD, CVA
- EXCLUSION
- MI, UA, CABG, PTCA/PCI 2 weeks prior
Joseph et al. NEJM 19963351792-1798
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36What about pts with MI?
- STEMI GUIDELINES
- Class I1. Patients recovering from STEMI who
have a history of cigarette smoking should be
strongly encouraged to stop smoking and to avoid
secondhand smoke. Counseling should be provided
to the patient and family, along with
pharmacological therapy (including nicotine
replacement and bupropion) and formal smoking
cessation programs as appropriate. (Level of
Evidence B)
37Pregnancy and the patch??
- Relative contra-indication
38Non-nicotine replacement therapy
39Efficacy of Bupropion SR (n 2 Studies)
Odds Ratio (95) CI
Estimated Abstinence Rate
Pharmacotherapy
Placebo (reference group)
1.0
17.3
30.5
2.1 (1.5 - 3.0)
Bupropion SR
40Bupropion (Zyban)
- Lowers the seizure threshold
- Risk in pts without h/o seizures 0.1
- Significant drug-drug interactions
- Inhibits CYP2D6 isoenzymes
- Can affect Beta-blockers, anti-arrhythmics, SSRIs
Joseph AM, Fu SS. Safety issues in
pharmacotherapy for smoking in patients with
cardiovascular disease Progress in Cardiovascular
Disease 2003 45 (6) 429-441
41Bupropion (Zyban)
- Most common side effects
- Vivid dreams (Kuwaiti experience)
- Insomnia
- Dry mouth
- Headache, nausea/vomiting, constipation and
tremor (no difference compared w/ placebo)
Thomson, CC and Rigotti, NA . Hospital- and
clinic- based smoking cessation interventions for
smokers with Cardiovascular disease. Progress
in cardiovascular diseases 2003 45 (6)459-479
42Smoking Cessation Pharmacotherapy
Pharmacotherapy combined with behavioral support
provides the best success rate
Other nicotine replacement therapy options
include nicotine gum, lozenge, inhaler, nasal
spray
43Chantix (Varenicline)
- Partial agonist binds selectively to a4b2
nicotinic acetylcholine receptors with greater
affinity than nicotine with less stimulation - Stimulates release of dopamine (which is felt to
be reward related to smoking) - 1 mg twice daily compared with placebo and
bupoprion in 3 DB/PC/Randomized trials - Cessation _at_ 12 weeks nine months later
- 12 placebo 8-10 placebo
- 30 zyban 15-16 zyban
- 44 varenicline 23-23 varenicline
44Getting the patient to quit
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47- 8 randomized trials showed that extensive
training programs increased smokers identified
and offered advice, but no long term abstinence - Training can be expensive
- Simply providing programs for health care
professionals, without addressing the constraints
imposed by the conditions in which they practice,
is unlikely to be a wise use of health care
resources
Lancaster T et al. Training health care
prfessionals in smoking cessation. Cochrane
Database of Systematic reviews. 14 Nov 05
48Roadblocks to cessation
- Takes time in clinic.
- Inability to order medications unless pt enrolled
in class - Getting people info on the class
- Pts fear of gaining weight
- Pts scheduling the class
- Pts completing the class
49We need to change our approach
- Every pt.Every time
- Document tobacco dependence on the problem list
- Referral to tobacco cessation clinic
- 1 800 NO BUTTS
50Physicians need to lead the way
- Multi-disciplinary, physician led clinic
- No referrals necessary, walk-in basis
- Occurs once/week at 1600 in cardiology clinic
- 15-30 minutes of education by different
specialties
51Physicians need to lead the way
- 10 physicians will see the pts
- Determine motivation to quit
- Brief screening
- Counseling
- AHLTA documentation (template provided)
- Write prescriptions
- Should take no more than 30 minutes (no more than
10 minutes/pt)
52- Can see significant numbers of pts (30)
- Removes excuses for patients
- Removes excuses for doctors
- Doctors taking charge and setting the example
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56PREGNANCY??
- Nicotine replacement therapy
- Use only when non-pharmacologic measures have
failed, and when benefit outweighs risk - Bupoprion
- prospective, matched, controlled observational
study - Pregnant smokers with bupropion were
significantly more likely to quit than pregnant
controls (45 versus 14 percent)
Chan et. Al. Effectiveness of bupropion for
smoking cessation during pregnancy. J Addict Dis
200524(2)19-23
57Cost Effectiveness of Smoking Cessation Programs
- Cost effectiveness of physician counseling
similar to treatment of mild-to-moderate
hypertension - Estimated cost per year of life saved 2,000
traditional smoking cessation program 50,000
mammographic screening for breast cancer
58Dealing with nicotine withdrawal..
59- 1100 people will stop smoking today
- Their funeral will be within next 2-3 days
CDC 2000
60Relapse Prevention
- Recognize specific relapse problems by
identifying a problem that threatens his or her
abstinence. - Lack of support for cessation
- Schedule follow-up visits or telephone calls
- Help the patient identify sources of support
- Refer the patient for intense counseling or
support. - Negative mood or depression
- Refer patient to a specialist.
- Strong or prolonged withdrawal symptoms
- Consider extending the use of an approved
pharmacotherapy or adding/combining pharmacologic
medication to reduce strong withdrawal symptoms.
61Relapse Prevention
- Weight gain
- Increase physical activity discourage strict
dieting. - Reassure the patient that some weight gain after
quitting is common and appears to be
self-limiting. - Emphasize the importance of a healthy diet.
- Maintain the patient on pharmacotherapy
- Refer the patient to a specialist or program.
- Flagging motivation/feeling deprived
- Reassure the patient these feelings are common.
- Recommend rewarding activities.
- Evaluate for periodic tobacco use.
- Emphasize that beginning to smoke (even a puff)
will increase urges and make quitting more
difficult
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63Pharmacotherapy Agents