Examples
| Generic Name | Brand Name |
|---|
| varenicline | Chantix |
How It Works
Varenicline is a pill you take that acts
on sites in the brain affected by nicotine. Like nicotine medicines,
varenicline helps with craving and
withdrawal symptoms. But it also blocks the effects of
nicotine from tobacco. If you start smoking again while taking varenicline, the
medicine lowers the sense of satisfaction you get from smoking, improving the
chances that you will quit.
Varenicline does not contain nicotine
and does not help you quit smoking in the same way that nicotine replacement
therapy does.
You start taking varenicline about a week before you
quit smoking, and you take it for a total of 12 to 24 weeks.
Why It Is Used
Doctors prescribe varenicline to help
adults quit smoking. It is not available as an
over-the-counter medicine.
Varenicline
has not been studied in children under age 18 and is not recommended to help
them quit smoking.
How Well It Works
Varenicline doubles or triples the
chances of quitting smoking compared to a
placebo.1 And it may work
better than other treatments for quitting smoking.
Side Effects
Some of the common side effects
include:
- Nausea and, in rare cases,
vomiting.
- Vivid, strange, or unusual
dreams.
- Constipation.
- Feeling sleepy.
Stop taking this medicine and call your doctor right away
if you or someone around you notices that you:
- Feel anxious or nervous.
- Feel
upset, tense, or edgy.
- Feel depressed.
- Feel different,
with unusual emotions.
- Behave in ways that are not typical for
you.
- Have suicidal thoughts or actions.
Before taking varenicline, make sure to tell your doctor if
you have ever had a mental illness.
If you have or ever had a
mental illness, you may need to watch for signs of mood or behavior change
while you are taking this medicine and after you stop taking it. Your doctor
may want you to try a different treatment to help you stop smoking. Varenicline
may make current mental illness symptoms worse, or it may bring back symptoms
of mental illness in people who have had mental illness.
Varenicline is not addictive. Tell your doctor about side effects that
bother you or that do not go away.
See Drug Reference for a full
list of side effects. (Drug Reference is not available in all systems.)
What To Think About
You start taking varenicline about
a week before you plan to stop smoking. You may notice that you do not get the
same satisfaction from cigarettes during that week. Try not to increase your
smoking to overcome this.
You take varenicline 2 times a day,
after meals.
Tell your doctor about all the medicines you take,
including prescription and nonprescription medicines, vitamins, and herbal
supplements. When you stop smoking, there may be a change in how these
medicines work for you.
Tell your doctor if you:
- Have kidney problems.
- Are pregnant
or plan to become pregnant.
- Are breast-feeding.
- Have
ever had a mental illness such as
depression or
bipolar disorder.
If you have or ever had a mental illness, you may need to
watch for signs of mood or behavior change while you are taking this medicine
and after you stop taking it. Your doctor may want you to try a different
treatment to help you stop smoking. Chantix may make current mental illness
symptoms worse, or it may bring back symptoms of mental illness in people who
have had mental illness.
Some studies show that varenicline helped
more people quit smoking than bupropion hydrochloride (Zyban), another medicine
that does not contain nicotine and helps people quit smoking.2, 1 No studies have tested if
varenicline works better than nicotine replacement medicines.
Complete the new medication information form (PDF)
(What is a PDF document?) to help you understand this medication.
References
Citations
Varenicline (Chantix) for tobacco dependence (2006). Medical Letter on Drugs and Therapeutics, 48(1241/1242): 66–68.
U.S. Food and Drug Administration (2006). FDA approves novel medication for smoking cessation. FDA News. Available online: http://www.fda.gov/bbs/topics/NEWS/2006/NEW01370.html.