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The hypothesis of this study is that combination of Varenicline treatment with nurse-led hospital support during hospitalization and after discharge will result in clinically significant higher long term abstinence rates in smokers with ACS, as compared with nurse led support and placebo, without a significant increase in the risk of adverse events.
Full description
Smokers hospitalized with Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS) are at high risk for ischemic events or death. Over two thirds of patients continue to smoke after acute myocardial infarction.
Study objectives will evaluate safety and efficacy of Varenicline vs. placebo in hospitalized ACS patients complemented by nurse-led support. Interventions will continue following discharge for the duration of 12 weeks.
The primary efficacy outcome measure is continuous abstinence rate at 1 year after hospitalization as assessed by self-reporting and verified by CO breath test.
The proposed study is a prospective, double blind, randomized, placebo controlled, multi-center study. Overall 300 patients will be recruited, randomly allocated to active and placebo treatment groups that will receive nurse-led support by trained staff.
Hospitalized ACS smokers will be evaluated by the protocol inclusion/exclusion criteria. Patient's demographics, medical and laboratory data will be obtained including Fagestrom tobacco addiction questionnaire and digitally captured. Participants will be randomly allocated to study groups and will receive, Varenicline or placebo, which will be initiated on the last day of hospitalization and continued for 12 weeks after discharge. Additionally, a structured nurse-led behavioral support program for smoking cessation will be initiated during hospitalization, followed by telephone calls that will provide motivational support and an interview exploring protocol adherence, side effects, changes in health status and smoking status.
All patients will be re-assessed at one, 3 and 12 -months post discharge. Follow-up visits will comprise of a physical examination, adverse event assessment and CO breath testing.
Cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of death in Western countries, and cigarette smoking has a clear cause-and -effect relationship with atherosclerotic disease (1). Smokers hospitalized with Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS) are at high risk for subsequent ischemic events and present 50% higher chance of death in the first 2 years (2). Nevertheless, over two thirds of patients continue to smoke after an acute myocardial infarction. Varenicline has been shown to be highly effective smoking cessation intervention (4), yet concerns have been raised regarding safety in coronary patients (5).
A significant number of eligible patients do not receive structured smoking cessation interventions following ACS. Initiation of secondary prevention interventions during hospital stay has been shown to be highly effective for other key secondary prevention interventions (i.e. statins, beta blockers).
Moreover, combination of Varenicline treatment with nurse-led hospital support, initiated early during hospitalization is expected to result in better adherence and better long-term abstinence rates in smokers with a recent ACS.
This proposed study would be the first Israeli trial with Varenicline.
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
I. Severe pulmonary disease (FEV1 < 30% predicted ) II. End stage renal failure (eGFR < 20 ml/min/m2) III. Uncontrolled depression or history of psychosis or bipolar disorder or active substance abuse IV. Uncontrolled stage IV hypertension V. Un-resolved life threatening arrhythmia VI. Planned surgical intervention (within < 3 months) VII. Known hypersensitivity to study drug components VIII. Inability to comply with study protocol IX. Active malignancy other than basal cell carcinoma (BCC) X. End-stage congestive heart failure - NYHA IV or decompensated heart failure XI. Pregnancy or lactation
Primary purpose
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Interventional model
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300 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Central trial contact
Ilan Goldenberg, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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