Genes predict if medication can help you quit smoking May 30, 2012
in Genetics High-risk
genetic variations can increase the risk for nicotine dependence, but the same
gene variants predict a more robust response to anti-smoking medications.
Credit: Li-Shiun Chen The same gene
variations that make it difficult to stop smoking also increase the likelihood
that heavy smokers will respond to nicotine-replacement therapy and drugs that
thwart cravings, a new study shows. The
research, led by investigators at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis , will appear
online May 30 in
the American Journal of Psychiatry. The study suggests it may one day be possible
to predict which patients are most likely to benefit from drug treatments for
nicotine addiction. "Smokers whose genetic makeup puts them
at the greatest risk for heavy smoking, nicotine addiction and problems kicking
the habit also appear to be the same people who respond most robustly to
pharmacologic therapy for smoking cessation," says senior investigator
Laura Jean Bierut, MD, professor of psychiatry. "Our research suggests
that a person's genetic makeup can help us better predict who is most likely to
respond to drug therapy so we can make sure those individuals are treated with
medication in addition to counseling or other interventions." For the
new study, the researchers analyzed data from more than 5,000 smokers who participated
in community-based studies and more than 1,000 smokers in a clinical treatment
study. The scientists focused on the relationship between their ability to quit
smoking successfully and genetic variations that have been associated with risk
for heavy smoking and nicotine dependence. Smoking
researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in Sr. Louis have found
that the same genetic variations that make it difficult for some smokers to
quit also increase the likelihood that heavy smokers will respond to drugs,
patches and other medications designed to thwart nicotine cravings. Credit: Washington University
BioMed Radio "People with the
high-risk genetic markers smoked an average of two years longer than those
without these high-risk genes, and they were less likely to quit smoking
without medication," says first author Li-Shiun Chen, MD, assistant
professor of psychiatry at Washington
University . "The
same gene variants can predict a person's response to smoking-cessation
medication, and those with the high-risk genes are more likely to respond to
the medication."
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