Cover Image: September 2011 Scientific American Magazine See Inside

New Help for Smokers

An anti-nicotine vaccine is moving closer to regulatory approval















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Image: Martin Diebel Getty Images

As any smoker can tell you, quitting is relatively easy. The hard part is avoiding relapse—the urge to light up weeks or even months after you have supposedly kicked the habit. The patch, the gum and all the other tricks smokers use to get through the first few months are often powerless against those later urges.

That is one reason why an antinicotine vaccine now wending its way through clinical trials has public health officials so excited. Like all vaccines, NicVAX, made by NABI Biopharmaceuticals, works by stimulating the body’s immune system to produce antibodies against a certain target—in this case, nicotine. Because immune responses are generally lifelong, the vaccine makers say it could serve as a long-term antismoking aid.

Normally nicotine molecules are small enough to evade detection by the immune system. They are even small enough to slip past the blood-brain barrier and bind to receptors on brain cells, where they trigger a chemical cascade that leads to addiction. NicVAX floods the body with nicotine molecules that have been chemically attached to large, carrier proteins, forcing the immune system to recognize and deploy antibodies against the cigarette ingredient. Then, when ordinary nicotine molecules enter the system, those antibodies bind to them, making them too large to cross the blood-brain barrier.  

The vaccine doesn’t work for everyone. An earlier trial showed that 16 percent of heavy smokers who were vaccinated and had high antibody levels remained abstinent from cigarettes one year after quitting, compared with 6 percent of the placebo group. Those who produced high antibodies but did not quit cut their smoking in half, from around 20 cigarettes a day to 10.

Results from wider, or “phase III,” trials are expected as early as September. For these studies, researchers recruited 1,000 smokers who consume at least 10 cigarettes a day. The volunteers received five to six injections spaced roughly one month apart and were asked to quit after 14 weeks, when around 80 percent of subjects have high antibody levels. (Why 20 percent of subjects fail to produce a high antibody response to the vaccine is unclear.). “The idea is to ensure that when we tell them to quit, they have the tools—the antibodies—to help them,” says NABI CEO Raafat E. F. Fahim. He and his team have yet to determine how long patients will need to get shots.

If results from the phase III trials are as good as everyone expects, the vaccine could hit pharmacy shelves soon after. Meanwhile researchers are already at work on other antiaddiction vaccines, including one against cocaine that employs the same strategy as NicVAX.



This article was originally published with the title New Help for Smokers.



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  1. 1. econnell 12:09 AM 8/21/11

    Very interesting approach to addiction. But notice that $millions are spent on nicotine vaccine trials while tens of thousands suffer from Lyme disease with little help from the medical community when they fail to respond to standard antibiotic courses. Chase the almighty dollar and all others be damned. "We have the best medical system in the world" Mitch McConnell. But just don't actually get sick cause you will quickly learn otherwise. If you are a smoker I wish you the best of health, but this to me is another example of how broken our healthcare system is.

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  2. 2. MikeNH in reply to econnell 02:30 PM 9/6/11

    I have a friend with chronic Lyme, so I definitely am in support of any effort to increase R&D there. However, in terms of these priories being evidence of our broken healthcare system (which I do agree is broken), I think your argument is pretty weak considering there are over 400,000 deaths and 8,600,000 illnesses related to smoking in the last year (according to tobaccofreekids.org).

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  3. 3. bucketofsquid 05:48 PM 9/14/11

    Each person is different so finding a 100% cure for nicotine addiction is unlikely but it is nice that this one has such a high impact rate.

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  4. 4. emily1986 05:29 AM 1/17/13

    The creation experienced before been marketed being an assist to using tobacco cessation. But there's no concrete evidence to that and to the instruction from the Globe Well being Business the suppliers experienced EGO-T E-cigarette Battery (http://www.linkdelight.com/121212032W-2-in-1-650mAh-Rechargeable-Battery-for-E-Cigarettes-EGO-EGO-T.html) to get rid of all of the promotional substance boasting the identical.

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