Article Text
Abstract
Objectives This meta-analysis sought to evaluate the efficacy of opioid antagonists in promoting long-term smoking cessation. Post-treatment abstinence was examined as a secondary outcome and effects on withdrawal symptoms, craving and reduced consumption were also explored.
Design The search strategy for this meta-analysis included clinical trials (published and unpublished data) in the Cochrane Tobacco Addiction Group Specialized Register and MEDLINE.
Participants Adult smokers.
Interventions We included randomised trials comparing opioid antagonists to placebo or an alternative therapy for smoking cessation and reported data on abstinence for a minimum of 6 months.
Primary and secondary outcome measures Outcomes included smoking abstinence at long-term follow-up (primary); abstinence at end of treatment (secondary); and effects on withdrawal, craving and smoking consumption (exploratory).
Results 8 trials with a total of 1213 participants were included. Half the trials examined the benefit of adding naltrexone versus placebo to nicotine replacement therapy (NRT). There was no significant difference between naltrexone and placebo alone (relative risk (RR) 1.00; 95% CI 0.66 to 1.51) or as an adjunct to NRT (RR 0.95; 95% CI 0.70 to 1.30), with an overall pooled estimate of RR 0.97; 95% CI 0.76 to 1.24. Findings for naltrexone effects on withdrawal, craving and reduced smoking were equivocal.
Conclusions The findings indicate no beneficial effect of naltrexone alone or as an adjunct to NRT on short-term or long-term smoking abstinence. While further trials may narrow the confidence limits, they are unlikely to appreciably alter the conclusion.
- opioid antagonists
- smoking cessation
- tobacco
- smoking abstinence
- naltrexone
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Strengths and limitations of this study
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This meta-analysis compares opioid antagonists to placebo or an alternative therapy for smoking cessation and reports data on abstinence for a minimum of 6 months.
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The meta-analysis includes published and unpublished results from eight trials with a total of 1213 participants.
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The findings indicate no beneficial effect of naltrexone alone or as an adjunct to nicotine replacement therapy on short-term or long-term smoking abstinence, which suggests that further investment in clinical trials of naltrexone for this indication are unlikely to change the conclusion that this medication does not provide a clinically significant benefit for helping smokers stop smoking.
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Inability to refute published claims of differential benefits of naltrexone for smoking cessation in subgroups defined by gender or secondary benefits on reduction of postcessation weight gain.
Background
Tobacco use is the leading preventable cause of death.1 US clinical practice guidelines recommend the use of pharmacotherapy for quitting smoking.2 Medications with demonstrable efficacy for cessation include nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) in the form of gum, patch, lozenge, inhaler and nasal spray with pooled relative risk (RR) for any NRT of 1.60, 95% CI 1.53 to 1.683; bupropion with RR=1.69, CI 1.53 to 1.854; and varenicline with RR=2.27, CI 2.02 to 2.55.3 ,5 Effective second-line treatments include nortriptyline (RR 2.03; CI 1.48 to 2.78)4 and clonidine (OR 1.89, CI 1.30 to 2.74).6 Yet, long-term quit rates with these pharmacotherapies are relatively modest, in the range of 19–36.5%.2 With relapse as the norm, there is continued interest in medication development and discovery of pharmacological agents for assisting tobacco cessation.
Naltrexone (Narpan, Revia, Vivitrol, with half-life of 240 min7), a long-acting opioid antagonist, is a marketed drug that blunts the effects of narcotics such as heroin, meperidine, morphine and oxycodone and is effective in the treatment of alcohol dependence.8 ,9 Naltrexone occupies µ-opioid receptors, which putatively diminishes the activation of mesolimbic dopamine and therefore may reduce craving for nicotine. With different mechanisms of action, it has been postulated that NRT and naltrexone could produce additive effects for treating nicotine withdrawal and preventing relapse. Since opioid antagonists are known to precipitate nicotine withdrawal in nicotine dependent animals,10––13 administering NRT in conjunction may attenuate any increased withdrawal, dysphoria and sedation caused by naloxone and naltrexone. Naloxone (Narcan, with half-life 30–100 min14) is a short-acting opioid antagonist routinely administered to reverse the acute effects of narcotic overdose. Naloxone has been shown to block the reinforcing properties of nicotine and precipitate physical and affective symptoms of nicotine withdrawal in rodent studies.10––13 Buprenorphine (Buprenex, Subutex, Suboxone (combination buprenorphine/naltrexone), Butrans, with half-life 24–60 h)15 is a mixed agonist-antagonist used for the treatment of opioid dependence. Although less widely studied for this indication, naloxone and buprenorphine have also been evaluated as potential smoking cessation aids and are included in this review.
Concerns regarding potential adverse effects have led to US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) black box warnings for the cessation medications bupropion and varenicline. With respect to the adverse event profile of opioid antagonists when used in the treatment of opioid dependence, serious adverse effects are uncommon but there is an FDA black box warning regarding potential hepatotoxicity for naltrexone. Nervous system side effects reported in >10% of patients during treatment for opioid dependence have included headaches, nervousness, anxiety, difficulty sleeping and low energy; those reported in <10% of patients include loss of appetite, increased energy, irritability and dizziness. Asthenia, agitation, hyperkinesia, nervousness, fatigue, restlessness, confusion, disorientation and somnolence have been reported rarely. Side effects of buprenorphine are similar to those of other opioids and include nausea, vomiting and constipation.
While opioid antagonists are typically used in the treatment of opioid dependence, the primary objective of this systematic review and meta-analysis was to evaluate the long-term efficacy of opioid antagonists (ie, naltrexone, naloxone and buprenorphine), alone or in combination with NRT, in promoting smoking cessation. The secondary objective was to evaluate the short-term (post-treatment) abstinence effects. Specific opioid antagonists were considered separately rather than grouping the medications as a class. We tested the hypotheses that opioid antagonists: (1) are more effective than placebo in promoting early and sustained abstinence from smoking and (2) when used in combination with NRT are more effective than NRT alone in promoting early and sustained abstinence from smoking. We also summarise the literature on the effects of opioid antagonists in treating withdrawal symptoms, attenuating the reinforcing value of smoking and reducing ad libitum smoking. The results of this systematic review and meta-analyses have been published in a recent Cochrane Review.16
Methods
Search strategy and study selection
We included randomised controlled trials of opioid antagonists with adult smokers that reported smoking status at least 6 months after intervention to assess the efficacy for long-term cessation. For the secondary outcome, we also considered randomised controlled trials of opioid antagonists reporting abstinence at end of treatment or that reported the outcomes of nicotine withdrawal, reinforcing properties of smoking or ad libitum smoking. The medications evaluated were naltrexone, naloxone, buprenorphine or other opioid antagonists, with or without concurrent use of NRT.
To identify eligible studies, we searched the Tobacco Addiction group Specialized Register in April 2013 using the terms ‘naloxone’ or ‘naltrexone’ or ‘buprenorphine’ or ‘opioid antagonist’ or ‘opiate antagonist’ or ‘narcotic antagonist’ in the title or abstract or as keywords. At the time of the search, the Register included the results of searches of the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled trials (CENTRAL), issue 3, 2013; MEDLINE (via OVID) through 29 March 2013; EMBASE (via OVID) through 16 March 2013 and PsycINFO (via OVID) through 1 April 2013. An additional search of MEDLINE (via OVID through 17 April 2013) used the terms (explode “Narcotic-Antagonists”/all subheadings) AND (“Smoking-Cessation”/all subheadings OR “Tobacco-Use-Disorder”/all subheadings OR “Smoking”/all subheadings). Two authors cross-checked the studies to insure they met the inclusion criteria. Discrepancies were resolved by mutual consent including a third author, as required. We noted reasons for the non-inclusion of studies. Details of the search are in the PRISMA Diagram (figure 1).
PRISMA diagram of literature search and data extraction.
Data extraction
Data extraction included: basic study characteristics (sample size, design, blinding, method of randomisation and location), sample characteristics (cigarettes/day and intention to quit), tobacco measures and outcomes, reported adverse effects and attrition. The primary outcome measure of interest was abstinence at 6 months or longer, with preference given to the longest follow-up available. Abstinence at end of treatment was a secondary outcome. We used a sustained cessation rate in preference to point prevalence, and biochemical verification of self-reported quitting where reported (eg, carbon monoxide (CO) and cotinine). Other outcome measures of interest included withdrawal, reinforcing or hedonic effects of smoking, mood states and ad libitum smoking.
Data analysis
For the abstinence outcomes, we calculated RRs of abstinence at longest follow-up using as the denominators the numbers of patients randomised to each arm excluding any deaths and treating those who dropped out or were lost to follow-up as continuing to smoke. We noted any deaths and adverse events in the results tables. If necessary, we contacted authors for clarification of specific points. Separately, we combined the results of studies evaluating short-term and long-term cessation using the Mantel-Haenszel fixed-effect model for pooling risk ratios. Effect sizes were calculated for all trials together and by whether or not NRT was used. In a sensitivity analysis, we estimated the effect at end of treatment of adding in the results from studies excluded due to lack of long-term follow-up. For assessment of risk of bias, we evaluated studies on the basis of random sequence generation (selection bias), allocation concealment (selection bias), blinding (performance bias and detection bias) and incomplete outcome data (attrition bias).17 None of the trials of buprenorphine or naloxone were eligible for inclusion in meta-analyses of abstinence because of lack of sufficient follow-up or available abstinence outcomes. Therefore, we report abstinence results only for naltrexone. Procedures varied and few studies reported on measures of withdrawal, craving and smoking reduction for buprenorphine, naloxone and naltrexone; hence, these outcomes were narratively summarised. Characteristics of all included and excluded studies are published in the Cochrane Review.16
Findings
Long-term abstinence
We identified eight trials evaluating naltrexone and reporting long-term abstinence rates with a total of 1213 participants (table 1).18––26 Three studies examined naltrexone monotherapy relative to placebo; four studies examined naltrexone as an adjunct to NRT or placebo; and one study had four arms, which allowed for examination of naltrexone alone versus as an adjunct to NRT with matched placebo conditions for both arms.25 There was no evidence of heterogeneity in subgroups with or without NRT. Naltrexone dose ranged from 25 to 150 mg daily. Five trials provided cessation counselling with the medication of either brief (15–20 min)19 ,25 or more extended duration.18 ,20 ,24 Four studies biochemically confirmed non-smoking status.19 ,20 ,23 ,24 Abstinence data were unpublished for two of the studies and obtained directly from the authors.21 ,22 For one of the studies, part of a multicentre trial with 350 participants enrolled at five centres in the USA, the authors only published the results from the Mayo Clinic site, which enrolled 100 people but would not provide unpublished data for the other study sites upon repeated requests (R Croop, personal communication to Dr. Robert Croop of DuPont Merck Pharmaceutical Company, 2000). Despite our attempts to obtain unpublished data for the other 250 participants, the funder DuPont, has not disclosed further results.16 In one study,19 there were three different treatment arms of 25, 50 and 100 mg naltrexone. The 50 and 100 mg groups were combined and included in the meta-analysis, however, we conducted a sensitivity analysis and including the 25 mg arm did not significantly change the results—as previously reported.16
Characteristics of included studies
The pooled estimate for the eight trials gave no evidence of a treatment effect (RR 0.97; 95% CI 0.76 to 1.24; table 2). For the five studies that examined naltrexone alone versus placebo (n=450), the pooled estimate was RR 1.00; 95% CI 0.66 to 1.51 (table 2),18 ,21––23 ,25 and the estimate was not sensitive to exclusion of the two studies with unpublished data lacking biochemical validation of abstinence.21 ,22 For the four studies that examined naltrexone versus placebo as an adjunct to NRT (n=768), the pooled estimate was RR 0.95; 95% CI 0.70 to 1.30.19 ,20 ,24 ,25
Naltrexone versus placebo (single pharmacotherapy or adjunct to NRT), abstinence at longest follow-up
Three trials raised the possibility that there could be a difference in effect by sex, with women showing more evidence of a benefit than men for smoking cessation in two trials18 ,20 and showing less of a benefit in a third.24 In one trial, naltrexone showed a greater effect in preventing weight gain for women than men.24 The other five abstinence studies did not report quit rates for men and women separately20 ,22 ,24 ,26 ,27 and a summary estimate could not be calculated without risk of reporting bias.
Short-term abstinence
Similar to the analysis of long-term abstinence effects, there was no evidence of an early treatment effect and with a slightly narrower CI (RR 1.03; 95% CI 0.88 to 1.22, table 3). Three studies in addition to the eight trials in the main analysis were found to only report short-term outcomes.27––29 Inclusion of the 116 participants from these trials did not greatly alter the estimate (RR 1.09, 95% CI 0.93 to 1.27).
Naltrexone versus placebo (single pharmacotherapy or adjunct to NRT), abstinence at end of treatment (short-term outcomes)
Risk of bias in included studies
Studies included in the meta-analysis were evaluated on their attempts to control bias in randomisation, allocation, assessment and analysis. None of the eight studies were judged at high risk for selection bias due to inadequate randomisation or allocation concealment procedures, but three did not report methods in sufficient detail for the possibility of allocation bias to be discounted.18 ,21 ,22 Two of these studies have only been reported as abstracts with limited methodological detail. All studies were described as double blind. The long-term cessation studies confirmed abstinence with biochemical verification, with two exceptions.21 ,22 Five studies reported exhaled CO verification,19 ,20 ,24 ,25 ,29 and one study reported plasma cotinine concentration.18 This study had high attrition in both groups and greater attrition earlier in the naltrexone group: 10 people in the naltrexone group and 2 people in the placebo group were considered treatment failures because they dropped out prior to the target quit day.18
Withdrawal, hedonic effects and smoking reduction
Overall, findings were mixed for effects of naltrexone, naloxone and buprenorphine on measures of nicotine withdrawal, nicotine reward and ad libitum smoking. Ten studies indicated no effect of naltrexone on withdrawal symptom scores.18 ,20 ,23 ,25 ,29––35 Five studies reported reductions in withdrawal or smoking urge.19 ,20 ,24 ,34 ,36 For one of the trials, the effect was found only at the 100 mg dose compared to placebo and not at lower doses.19 Additionally, three trials indicated diminished withdrawal symptoms following provocative smoking cues during sustained abstinence,37––39 and one trial reported that naltrexone reduced ethanol's enhancing effect on smoking urge symptoms but naltrexone did not have a significant main effect on smoking urges.40 For naloxone, two studies found no significant difference in withdrawal symptoms or mood states relative to placebo,41 ,42 and another study showed an increased urge to smoke (craving) and tiredness at lower dosages of naloxone.43
Studies evaluating the reinforcing effects of smoking also were mixed. Two studies found no effect of naltrexone on self-reported satisfaction from smoking30 or smoking reinforcement.38 ,39 ,44 Other studies found significant reduction in self-reported satisfaction with smoking,41 ,45 increased negative mood following smoking32; increased lightheadedness, dizziness and head rush following a cigarette,33 and significantly reduced postcigarette craving.33 For naloxone, two studies found no effect on the reinforcing properties of smoking cigarettes.42 ,46
Lastly, the results regarding ad libitum smoking were mixed. There were no significant effects of naltrexone on ad libitum smoking in three small trials.30––32 However, six trials demonstrated statistically significant reductions in the number of cigarettes smoked ad libitum.33 ,34 ,36 ,38 ,47 ,48 Five trials designed to evaluate abstinence and other outcomes during smoking cessation reported effects of naltrexone on daily or weekly smoking during and/or after treatment with naltrexone.19 ,23––25 ,29 Three studies did not find any association between naltrexone and number of cigarettes smoked among continuing smokers,21 ,22 ,25 another reported cigarettes per week increased more in the placebo group compared to the naltrexone group at the 100 mg dose of naltrexone,19 and two studies reported significantly lower weekly cigarettes smoked in the naltrexone (vs placebo) arms of the respective trials.23 ,24 For naloxone, two studies reported significant reductions in number of cigarettes smoked relative to placebo42 ,46 and one study did not find an effect over a wide range of dosages for any measure of cigarette smoking, including number of cigarettes, number of puffs or expired air CO.49 With buprenorphine, two studies found an increase in cigarette consumption associated with buprenorphine.50 ,51
Discussion
Eight double-blinded, randomised controlled trials of naltrexone with a total of 1213 adult smokers reported long-term abstinence data and 11 reported short-term outcomes. The point estimate for the risk ratio of the long-term effect of cessation pooling all studies, RR=0.97, suggests that naltrexone has no effect on abstinence. Further, there was no benefit of naltrexone relative to placebo for smoking cessation whether used alone or in combination with NRT. The 95% CI 0.76 to 1.24 indicates that the likelihood of any clinically important effect is very small. By comparison, the RR of long-term abstinence for NRT from 117 trials with over 50 000 participants was 1.60 (95% CI 1.53 to 1.68).3 We also know that one industry-sponsored naltrexone trial remains unpublished, the likelihood being that it too did not detect evidence of benefit (R Croop, personal communication). The results suggest that further research is only likely to make the CI narrower around no effect. A secondary analysis of pooled short-term outcomes also showed no evidence of a treatment effect. Including three randomised clinical trials that only reported short-term effects, with a total of 116 participants, did not alter this conclusion.
While we were unable to meta-analyse sex-specific effects including data from all eight trials, there was no compelling or consistent evidence of robust sex differences in efficacy for naltrexone. Although not an endpoint of this systematic review, two trials reported significant benefits of naltrexone for reducing postcessation weight gain,18 ,20 while one did not.24 A separate Cochrane review showed a modest benefit of naltrexone on reduced postcessation weight gain at end of treatment (mean difference −0.78 kg, 95% CI −1.52 to −0.05, N=2 trials), with insufficient data to assess the effects at 6 or 12 months.52 There were mixed results from individual trial as to whether opioid antagonists reduced nicotine withdrawal symptoms, the reinforcing effects of nicotine and tobacco or cigarette consumption, but the heterogeneity of methods and reporting precluded use of meta-analytic techniques.
Conclusions
While it would seem biologically plausible that opioid antagonists may support smoking cessation vis-à-vis attenuation of positive reinforcement, the current evidence suggests that naltrexone provides no benefit for immediate or sustained smoking cessation. The neurobiology of nicotine addiction is complex and involves interactions between multiple neurotransmitter systems.53 Unequivocal benefits have been reported for other classes of smoking cessation medications (ie, nicotine replacement, bupropion and varenicline) with different mechanisms of action in large meta-analyses of scores of clinical trials.3––5 However, based on data from eight trials and over 1200 individuals, there is no evidence of a therapeutic effect of naltrexone alone or as an adjunct to NRT on short-term or long-term smoking abstinence rates. While further trials may narrow the confidence limits, they are unlikely to change the conclusion of lack of benefit.
Acknowledgments
The authors would like to thank Dr Baltieri, Dr Batki, Dr Hutchison, Dr Niaura, Dr O'Malley and Dr Szombathyne-Meszaros for assistance with providing additional information or data on available studies. They also thank Monaz Mehta for her editorial contributions.
References
Footnotes
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Contributors All authors contributed to this work. SPD designed the study, implemented all methods and guided interpretation of the results. SPD and IMC participated in the drafting and editing of the paper at every stage. SPD, TL, AEE and JJP posed the question, coordinated the research team and participated in all stages of the analysis and drafting of the manuscript. SPD, TL, LFS and JJP assisted in study design and extraction of data and advised on the analysis methods.
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Funding This research received no specific grant from any funding agency in the public, commercial or not-for-profit sectors. Support for Dr David and Ms Chu provided by a research stipend from the James C Puffer, MD/American Board of Family Medicine/Institute of Medicine Anniversary Fellowship.
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Competing interests Support to SPD from National Institute on Drug Abuse grant PHS no. R01-DA017441. JJP has served on ad hoc scientific advisory and grant review boards for Pfizer and has a Pfizer funded investigator initiated research award.
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Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.
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Data sharing statement Unpublished data included in this report are available from the corresponding author upon request.