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Psychological Intervention and Antidepressant Treatment in Smoking Cessation
Sharon M. Hall, PhD;
Gary L. Humfleet, PhD;
Victor I. Reus, MD;
Ricardo F. Muñoz, PhD;
Diane T. Hartz, PhD;
Roland Maude-Griffin, BA
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2002;59:930-936.
Background Sustained-release bupropion hydrochloride and nortriptyline hydrochloride
have been shown to be efficacious in the treatment of cigarette smoking. It
is not known whether psychological intervention increases the efficacy of
these antidepressants. This study compared both drugs with placebo. It also
examined the efficacy of these 2 drugs and placebo with and without psychological
intervention.
Methods This was a 2 (medical management vs psychological intervention) x
3 (bupropion vs nortriptyline vs placebo) randomized trial. Participants were
220 cigarette smokers. Outcome measures were biologically verified abstinence
from cigarettes at weeks 12, 24, 36, and 52.
Results Psychological intervention produced higher 7-day point-prevalence rates
of biochemically verified abstinence than did medical management alone. With
the use of point-prevalence abstinence, both nortriptyline and bupropion were
more efficacious than placebo. On rates of 1-year continuous abstinence, the
2 drugs did not differ from each other or from placebo. Psychological intervention
did not differ from medical management alone on rates of 1-year continuous
abstinence.
Conclusions Both nortriptyline and bupropion are efficacious in producing abstinence
in cigarette smokers. Similarly, psychological intervention produces better
abstinence rates than simple medical management. Both drugs, and psychological
intervention, have limited efficacy in producing sustained abstinence. The
data also suggest that combined psychological intervention and antidepressant
drug treatment may not be more effective than antidepressant drug treatment
alone.
From the Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco
(Drs Hall, Humfleet, Reus, Muñoz, and Hartz); and Edina, Minn (Mr Maude-Griffin).
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