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Quit-smoking drug linked to serious psychiatric side-effects: FDA

Quit-smoking drug linked to serious psychiatric side-effects: FDA

Reported February 01, 2008

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued a public health warning Friday about a highly touted smoking cessation drug after it was linked to potentially serious neuropsychiatric symptoms.

Adverse effects have been reported in relation to the prescription medication Chantrix (varenicline), which is sold in Canada under the brand name Champix, including changes in behaviour, agitation, depressed mood, and suicidal thoughts and behaviour.

The FDA has requested that Pfizer, the drug’s manufacturer, add the new safety information to the warnings and precautions section of the medication’s prescribing information or labelling. The agency also is working with Pfizer to finalize a medication guide for patients.

“Chantix has proven to be effective in smokers motivated to quit, but patients and health-care professionals need the latest safety information to make an informed decision regarding whether or not to use this product,” Dr. Bob Rappaport, director of the FDA’s division of anesthesia, analgesia and rheumatology products, said in an advisory.
 

 

“Patients should talk with their doctors about this new information and whether Chantix is the right drug for them, and health-care professionals should closely monitor patients for behaviour and mood changes if they are taking this drug.”

Chantix, approved by the FDA in May 2006 and as Champix by Health Canada a year ago, acts on sites in the brain affected by nicotine. The drug helps ease withdrawal symptoms and blocks the effects of nicotine if users resume smoking.

The FDA said patients should tell their doctors about any history of psychiatric illness prior to starting the drug, as it may worsen the condition, even if currently under control. It may also cause an old psychiatric illness to recur.

The agency noted that patients with psychiatric illnesses were not included in the studies conducted for the drug’s approval.

Patients taking the smoking cessation aid should be alert for any changes in mood and behaviour, as should their families and health providers, said the advisory. Symptoms may include anxiety, nervousness, tension, depressed mood, unusual behaviours and thinking about or attempting suicide.

In most cases, neuropsychiatric symptoms developed during treatment with the drug, but in others, symptoms developed following withdrawal of therapy.

Patients taking the drug:

-Should immediately report changes in mood and behaviour to their doctor.

-May experience vivid, unusual or strange dreams.

-May have impaired ability to drive or operate heavy machinery.

Source : The Canadian Press

 

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