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Use of low-dose varenicline in patients who do not tolerate standard-dose varenicline: A longitudinal case series

Publication ,  Journal Article
Swanson, M; Masclans, LC; Davis, JM
Published in: Tobacco Prevention and Cessation
January 1, 2025

INTRODUCTION Although varenicline tartrate is the most effective monotherapy for smoking cessation, the standard-dose (1 mg twice daily) is associated with adverse events: gastrointestinal, sleep-related, and mood-related. Lower doses have demonstrated similar efficacy with lower adverse event incidence. The purpose of this study was to determine whether patients who previously discontinued standard-dose varenicline due to adverse events could tolerate and benefit from low-dose varenicline. METHODS We conducted a prospective longitudinal pilot study of 22 adult daily smokers in Durham NC, USA, in 2022. All participants previously discontinued standard-dose varenicline due to adverse events. These patients were prescribed either 0.5 mg twice daily for varenicline-related nausea or 1 mg in the morning for sleep problems. The primary outcome was change in self-reported adverse event severity (scale: 0–7). Secondary outcomes were smoking abstinence at 6-week follow-up and tolerance of the lower dose. RESULTS Patients with intolerable nausea reported significant severity reduction (6.00 to 0.00; p<0.001) as did patients with intolerable vivid dreams (3.27 to 0.27; p=0.001). Smoking abstinence rates were 28.6% for 0.5 mg twice daily and 26.7% for 1 mg once daily. Low-dose varenicline tolerance was 81.8%. CONCLUSIONS Patients who experience significant nausea with standard-dose varenicline may successfully make transition to a 0.5 mg low dose twice daily and those who experience vivid dreams to 1 mg varenicline in the morning. Treatment efficacy rates remained relatively high. This suggests a need for a future randomized controlled trial to establish low-dose varenicline as an approach for patients who do not tolerate the standard-dose varenicline.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Tobacco Prevention and Cessation

DOI

EISSN

2459-3087

Publication Date

January 1, 2025

Volume

11

Issue

March

Start / End Page

1 / 6

Related Subject Headings

  • 4206 Public health
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
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MLA
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Swanson, M., Masclans, L. C., & Davis, J. M. (2025). Use of low-dose varenicline in patients who do not tolerate standard-dose varenicline: A longitudinal case series. Tobacco Prevention and Cessation, 11(March), 1–6. https://doi.org/10.18332/tpc/194629
Swanson, M., L. C. Masclans, and J. M. Davis. “Use of low-dose varenicline in patients who do not tolerate standard-dose varenicline: A longitudinal case series.” Tobacco Prevention and Cessation 11, no. March (January 1, 2025): 1–6. https://doi.org/10.18332/tpc/194629.
Swanson M, Masclans LC, Davis JM. Use of low-dose varenicline in patients who do not tolerate standard-dose varenicline: A longitudinal case series. Tobacco Prevention and Cessation. 2025 Jan 1;11(March):1–6.
Swanson, M., et al. “Use of low-dose varenicline in patients who do not tolerate standard-dose varenicline: A longitudinal case series.” Tobacco Prevention and Cessation, vol. 11, no. March, Jan. 2025, pp. 1–6. Scopus, doi:10.18332/tpc/194629.
Swanson M, Masclans LC, Davis JM. Use of low-dose varenicline in patients who do not tolerate standard-dose varenicline: A longitudinal case series. Tobacco Prevention and Cessation. 2025 Jan 1;11(March):1–6.

Published In

Tobacco Prevention and Cessation

DOI

EISSN

2459-3087

Publication Date

January 1, 2025

Volume

11

Issue

March

Start / End Page

1 / 6

Related Subject Headings

  • 4206 Public health