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Chantix, Smoking-Cessation Drug, Raises Suicide Risks, New Study Shows

Chantix Suicide

First Posted: 11/04/11 02:50 PM ET Updated: 11/04/11 02:50 PM ET

Pfizer's smoking cessation drug Chantix carries too many risks and should only be tried when other treatments fail, researchers said on Wednesday.

Chantix was eight times more likely to be linked with a reported case of suicidal behavior or depression than other nicotine replacement products, such as the nicotine patch, they said.

The findings contradict two studies released last month by the Food and Drug Administration that showed Chantix (sold as Champix outside the United States) did not increase the risk of being hospitalized for psychiatric problems such as depression.

The agency at the time acknowledged that those studies were flawed because they were too small to identify rare events and they only captured cases that were severe enough to land people in the hospital.

"Our study contradicts the implications of a recent review by the FDA showing no difference in psychiatric hospitalizations between varenicline and nicotine replacement patches," said Dr. Curt Furberg, professor of Public Health Sciences at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center, co-author of the study published online in the Public Library of Science journal PLoS One.

"The FDA hospitalization studies were flawed because they could not capture most of the serious psychiatric side effects, including suicide, depression, aggression and assaults. These can be catastrophic events but do not normally result in hospitalization," Furberg said in a statement.

CHANTIX VS ZYBAN

The new study relies on adverse events from the FDA's Adverse Event Reporting System from 1998 through September 2010. They analyzed 3,249 reports of serious self-injury or depression linked to Chantix (varenicline), GlaxoSmithKline's Zyban (bupropion) antidepressant that was approved for smoking cessation and nicotine replacement products.

They found that 2,925 cases, or 90 percent, of suicidal behavior or depression reported to the FDA were related to Chantix, even though the drug was only approved for four of the nearly 13 years of data included in the study.

By comparison, there were 229 cases of suicidal behavior or depression related to bupropion and 95 cases related to nicotine replacement products.

"We found that Chantix is associated with more suicidal behavior reports than any other smoking-cessation drug on the U.S. market. The risks simply outweigh the benefits," Furberg said.

Pfizer defended its drug, saying in a statement the analysis relies on reports of serious events to the FDA. These reports come from a range of sources and often lack important medical information, making them unsuitable for studies such as this, the company said.

"These same authors persist in publishing analyses based on a review of spontaneous reports," Pfizer said in a statement. "It is important to remember that post-marketing reports do not establish a cause and effect relationship between a medicine and a reported adverse event."

Prior studies by Furberg and colleagues have shown Chantix increases the risk of heart problems, unprovoked aggression, and sudden blackouts.

"There were reports of people driving cars and blacking out," said Furberg. He and fellow researchers were so concerned about this side effect that they took their findings to the Federal Aviation Administration, which banned pilots from using Chantix in 2008.

Of course, tobacco use also has serious risks. It is responsible for one in five deaths in the United States each year and adds $193 billion to health care costs.

And quitting is exceedingly difficult.

According to the Department of Health and Human Services, 36 percent of the nation's smokers try to quit each year, but only 3 percent succeed in quitting for six months or more.

Furberg said patients and regulators need to balance the risks of smoking with the benefits of quitting.

But with Chantix, the benefit is slight, Furberg said.

A year after people start taking the drug, only 10 percent of people are off cigarettes, he said.

Chantix carries strong warnings about side effects on its label, but Furberg and colleagues want the FDA to further restrict its use by making it a second-choice drug when other treatments have failed.

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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Pfizer's smoking cessation drug Chantix carries too many risks and should only be tried when other treatments fail, researchers said on Wednesday. Chantix was eight times more likely to be link...
Pfizer's smoking cessation drug Chantix carries too many risks and should only be tried when other treatments fail, researchers said on Wednesday. Chantix was eight times more likely to be link...
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05:52 PM on 12/15/2011
My 25 year old brother killed himself a month ago. He had been on Chantix for just a few weeks prior to his death. The toxicology report confirmed Chantix in his system. Is there a class action my family can get more information about? This drug and its "side-effect" of suicide needs a great deal more attention.
07:50 AM on 11/15/2011
I took Chantix and I quit smoking. I also almost died and ended up in the hospital. The really sad part was my doctor would never admit that the problem was Chantix. The side effects of this drug are not minor things--a rash, jitters, blurred vision--how would YOU Like to be without a husband or wife or other loved one because of "unintended side effects?" Take it off the market and make Pfizer pay for what they have done.
11:11 AM on 11/09/2011
My 30 year old brother-in-law, with no history of mental illness, fatally shot himself in the head last year in the home he shared with his wife and three children. He had been taking Chantix and recently started having terrible nightmares. I don't know if Chantix was the reason he committed suicide, but this study confirms that there is an increased risk. That is a fact. I can assure you that his children and wife, as well as the rest of his family, would much rather have him here, smoking, than dead. I find the comments about the risk being worth it since smoking is a slow form of suicide highly insensitive. Also, my brother in law did not kill himself because of nicotine withdrawl...he was still smoking, as you can with Chantix.

And to the smokers saying this saved their life - I smoked a pack a day for 10 years and quit cold turkey. It was a rough week or so...that's about it. This entire notion that quitting smoking is so impossible is silly. It's quite possible and you don't need a drug to do it.
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Debbie338
What we manifest is before us
06:20 PM on 11/08/2011
My husband and I did Chantix and it worked like a charm. Yes, it made us both edgy and irritable. Maybe it does increase the risk of suicide. But, smoking is just slow-motion suicide, so don't discourage people from taking it if they need it.
VJ Sleight MA TTS
Tobacco Treatment Specialist
10:42 AM on 11/07/2011
Every medication has risks and benefits, even seemingly innocuous medications such as aspirin. We know the side effect of smoking the 7000 chemicals in tobacco smoke: death from heart disease, COPD, cancer and strokes, which happen to 50% of long term smokers.

I also don't think the problem is "quitting", it's--avoiding relapse, after all, quitting is easy as Mark Twain said, "I've done it hundreds of times."

All cessation medications are used to help a smoker get through the intense withdrawal period which can last from a week to several months depending on the smoker. What is needed is the education to keep the smoker from relapsing after being smoke-free for several months (or years), after the withdrawal period is over. Learning the behavior modification of how to live life without cigarettes forever is just as important as getting through withdrawals, and no medication can do that for you.
www.StopSmokingStayQuit.blogspot.com
05:34 PM on 11/06/2011
Side effects, or in this case SUIcide effects, are part of the reality of "unintended consequences". However, one can also note that smoking itself is a slow-motion form of suicide. In any event, there is no passive solution that will give an active result. My successes with smoking patients have all started with their own control buttons. They have been enjoying the perspectives gained in this blog,
by searching "smoking"on www.stressipedia.com.
12:13 PM on 11/05/2011
I smoked for almost 15 years, I finally found chantix and it was the best thing I have ever done. I had very vivid dreams but I did not want to kill myself, if anything I was trying to keep myself from dying because of smoking. I do believe that it could affect some people differently maybe even suicidal but just as everything I think maybe these people already have an underlying problem with depression and do not know how to maintain their feeling of suicide. I for one am happy that I took chantix and I am now a non smoker for 4 years and still going strong. I promised my kids vacations if I ever quit and so far we have gone on a 7 day cruise to the carribean, a trip to disney world, a trip to new orleans, a trip to cancun, and various smaller trips, so if that is not the best incentive to use chantix and quit then I dont know what is, It was well worth the risks.
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Debbie338
What we manifest is before us
06:22 PM on 11/08/2011
Yes, the vivid dreams! That happened to me, too. I am very glad I took Chantix and would not hesitate to recommend it. Best thing I ever did for myself.
VA Jill
Retired RN, Army mom. Bring the troops home!
11:28 AM on 11/05/2011
Suicide is not the only risk. One friend who tried it actually started losing her peripheral vision. The vision came back within 48 hours of stopping the drug. Another had sleep disturbances and nightmares so severe that he had to stop the drug. I could go on... Mostly I wonder how it ever got past the FDA.
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Kritikos
Intelligence is not a science
11:28 AM on 11/05/2011
New study? Hell, they even tell you; if you use this stuff you're nuts. Exert: "What is the most important safety information about CHANTIX?
Some people have had changes in behavior, hostility, agitation, depressed mood, suicidal thoughts or actions while using CHANTIX to help them quit smoking. Some people had these symptoms when they began taking CHANTIX, and others developed them after several weeks of treatment or after stopping CHANTIX. If you, your family, or caregiver notice agitation, hostility, depression, or changes in behavior, thinking, or mood that are not typical for you, or you develop suicidal thoughts or actions, anxiety, panic, aggression, anger, mania, abnormal sensations, hallucinations, paranoia, or confusion, stop taking CHANTIX and call your doctor right away. Also tell your doctor about any history of depression or other mental health problems before taking CHANTIX, as these symptoms may worsen while taking CHANTIX.
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yorktown1979
I don't get no respect!
12:23 PM on 11/07/2011
"New study? Hell, they even tell you; if you use this stuff you're nuts."

Call me nuts but at least I'm alive to hear you! Chantix helped me quit 4 years ago, and the heart attack I had 7 months later would have killed me had I still been a smoker! Thank God for Chantix!!!!!!
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Debbie338
What we manifest is before us
06:22 PM on 11/08/2011
You are obviously not a smoker.
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Kritikos
Intelligence is not a science
06:32 PM on 11/08/2011
Quit years ago--cold turkey, I might add. Yeah, it was hard, but necessary.
08:14 AM on 11/05/2011
Chantix and any other drug is not a one fits all deal....I used it effectively with few side effects...i'm just sick of these lawyers advertising law suits for people that have adverse effects from drugs that are the fault of no one....No one can predict the effect of a drug until it's taken. They don't sue the doctors, only the deep pockets of drug makers!
06:55 PM on 11/16/2011
It's easy to say that when YOU didn't almost die from it.
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yorktown1979
I don't get no respect!
07:35 AM on 11/05/2011
Gee if I were a Big Tobacco company, would I want a drug that could overcome the addictive properties of my product that I'd spent millions on developing the addictive additives to keep people addicted? I've got millions invested in killing people with carcinogenic additives designed to keep people addicted to tobacco. Of course I'm going to spend millions on "Doctors" to testify that Chantix must be bad because it works! Rent "The Insider" starring Al Pacino from Netflix and see what Big Tobacco is capable of!
09:56 AM on 11/05/2011
This isn't the work of tobacco companies. The drug truly can have serious psychological side effects. I have seen 2 individuals I know well, one being my mother, that became extremely depressed on it. Returned to their norm within a day or so of coming off the drug. It works, but people need to be aware of the risks.
01:30 AM on 11/05/2011
Another faulty study ! Suicides occur from nicotine withdrawal Chantix blocks the receptors in the brain which release dopamine. No dopamine NO feelings of euphoria. I'm willing to bet this study was paid for by the tobacco industry. I am tobacco free one year and two weeks. I just ran ten miles on Wednesday and six today. I recommend Chantix for anyone to get off tobacco.
10:00 AM on 11/05/2011
My mother became extremely depressed on the med. Her "emptiness" as she called it ended with a day or so of not taking the drug. She did not resume smoking. She has quit in the past and never experienced the severe emotional side effects she had while on the drug. Just because you didn't experience doesn't mean it isn't true for some.
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yorktown1979
I don't get no respect!
07:03 PM on 11/06/2011
Just because your mother was depressed to begin with doesn't mean that Chantix hasn't saved a lot of lives including mine. It also doesn't mean that the Tobacco companies didn't pay for this article.
11:00 PM on 11/04/2011
Chantix worked well and quickly for me...and I only took a fraction of the recommended dose. I took 1/2 pill at a time and only twice a day, max. Still had crazy dreams and increased aches...but I quit smoking in less than three weeks. That was two years ago. Sadly, still carrying the 20 lbs I gained in the process.
09:35 PM on 11/04/2011
Nicodern and nic gum or patches still supply nicotine. Maybe the suicide risk is from nicotine withdrawal rather than Chantix use itself.
09:13 PM on 11/04/2011
Tried this crap 5 yrs ago. I had horrible side effect. I didnt have suicidal thoughts I just flat knew I was going to die. I started to give my struff away. I told my children how I wanted to be buried. It was the creepiest time in my life. I couldnt tell if I was awake or asleep. I would leave my home or my job and end up 60miles away from my destination not knowing how I got there or where I was. The headaches were worse than migrains, Ive never had high bp but while I took this drug I sure had it. I decided that 5 month of this was enough even though I quit smoking while I was taking the drug when I quit taking the drug I started go thru withdrawal and then I started to smoke again. I will take my chances as a smoker because this stuff scared me to much.
06:56 PM on 11/16/2011
I'm sorry you went through that. I do remember that eerie feeling that something bad was going to happen to me. At least we're both alive to tell the tales!