Our Amazing Anti-Nicotine Vaccine Is Slightly More Effective Than a Placebo!
Jacob Sullum | May 17, 2005, 10:18am
If the unimpressive early performance of Cytos Biotechnology's anti-nicotine "vaccine" is any indication, we may not have to face the Orwellian possibilities of such drug use preventatives anytime soon. In Phase II clinical trials, Earth Times reports, 40 percent of subjects receiving the vaccine—which is supposed to stimulate production of antibodies that bind with nicotine molecules, making them too large to pass the blood-brain barrier—"were able to quit smoking for nearly six months." By comparison, 31 percent of the subjects who received the placebo "were able to stop smoking for 24 weeks"—i.e., nearly six months. Granted, these trials are intended mainly to demonstrate safety, but an effectiveness only slightly better than that of a placebo does not match the hopes of drug warriors who dream of taking their fight to our bloodstreams, although it may be enough to win FDA approval.
Notice, too, how the lead researcher misrepresents the way the vaccine is designed to work. He says smokers who receive it "don't feel that they have to take a cigarette to feel better," implying that the product somehow eliminates their cravings. But even if it were 100 percent effective, it would not make the cravings go away; it would just make it impossible to satisfy them.
Warren | May 17, 2005, 1:03pm | #
TWC
"There's no such thing as addiction" talk makes me boil. I don't see how anyone who has had the personal experience of loosing a loved one to addiction (and I should have thought that would include just about everyone), actually watching them trade their life and their future day by day to their habit, could possibly deny the disease model of addiction.
PLEASE don't mistake my words for "addicts are helpless" or such. Addiction is a matter of behavior and sane adults determine their behavior by choice (addiction is not insanity). But you are suggesting that every year thousands of people, who must choose between their comfortable, loving, and productive life they've lead in the past, and poverty, treachery, and endless misery of addiction, choose the latter because what? Too many educated, successful people succumb to addiction to credibly suggest that they are all just stupid, weak, or lazy.
As for myself, I have in the past, and in most cases still, use/enjoy/play around with; Alcohol, cigarettes, pot, cocaine, gambling and sex. Now in the case of pot, at one time my habit was so out of control I used to go to sleep at night, wake up in the morning, and keep me gong through the day. However, whenever I ran out of money, or couldn't find a source, I got along without. All that needed to happen to get my pot habit under control was to make the decision to do so.
Cigarettes were an entirely different matter. Once nicotine got it's hooks into me, there was no question in my mind that I had an honest to goodness addiction. Of course the nice thing about cigarettes is you can support your habit and still hold a down a job and be a tax-paying citizen. When I finally made a serious commitment to quit, it was an ordeal that lasted three months after my last smoke. I've been tobacco free for five years now. The thing that keeps me that was is the memory of my last cigarette, it was so good I knew it was an all or nothing thing for me.