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Postmarketing surveillance of the smoking-cessation drug varenicline suggested a high rate of adverse neuropsychiatric events such as worsened depression and suicidality, and the medication received an FDA black-box warning in 2009. To examine this issue more closely, investigators with funding from the National Institute of Mental Health reviewed two kinds of study data on depression, aggression/agitation, and suicidal events. Overall, 13% of participants had current or past psychiatric illness.
The investigators reviewed manufacturer-supplied data from 17 industry-sponsored, randomized, controlled trials involving varenicline (n= 4823 patients), bupropion (n=795), and placebo (n=3204). Analyses showed no differences between varenicline and placebo for suicidal thoughts and behaviors, depression, or aggression/agitation, regardless of whether patients had histories of psychiatric illness. However, varenicline patients reported more nausea (studied as a “positive control”) than placebo recipients (odds ratio, 3.69).
The researchers also reexamined a Department of Defense observational study of adverse events measured at 30 and 60 days following initiation of varenicline (N=19,933) or nicotine-patch (N=15,867) treatment; the study predated the black-box warning. Analyses adjusted results by “propensity scores” that matched varenicline- and nicotine-patch–treated patients by demographics, comorbid psychiatry and medical illnesses, and concurrent psychiatric and smoking-cessation medications. Adverse events were greater for nicotine patch than varenicline.
Gibbons RD and Mann JJ. Varenicline, smoking cessation, and neuropsychiatric adverse events. Am J Psychiatry 2013 Sep 13; [e-pub ahead of print]. (http://dx.doi.org/10.1176/appi.ajp.2013.12121599)
Comment
After reviewing the FDA data, the authors wondered whether the high number of safety signals reported for varenicline was due to “stimulated reporting” — i.e., reports that were snowballing because of heightened media coverage. These findings, together with the results of another recent, randomized, controlled trial, should assist clinicians and comfort patients considering varenicline to assist with smoking cessation, whether or not they have current or previous psychiatric illness.