Human Trials Of Anti-Smoking Vaccine Begin 119
Makarand writes "A Nicotine
vaccine that may help smokers to quit
has made it to human trials.
The vaccine is administered as a series of eight shots --
patients receive two shots per visit during four different visits. The vaccine works by
stimulating the human immune system to produce antibodies that
bind with the nicotine molecules
to form a larger complex molecule which
cannot pass through the blood/brain barrier to get
into the brain. As a result smokers
will not feel the 'high' from the cigarettes they light up and lose interest in smoking.
Preliminary studies have shown that this vaccine is safe in humans." (Each link goes to a slightly different version of the same wire story.)
There's more than one type of addiction (Score:5, Informative)
Re:There's more than one type of addiction (Score:2, Interesting)
Take suger for instance. People get used to eat somthing sweet to cheer up. But there is a measurable biological effect caused by blood glucose level.
Would that be a psycological addiction or a physical one? No matter what you call it, if you will not enjoy smoking you will find somthing better to feed your psycological needs.
Re:There's more than one type of addiction (Score:1)
I want some of what you're smoking!
BTW- What the hell are you talking about?
Re:There's more than one type of addiction (Score:2)
try google for ammonia cigarettes
(the short version is that its being done...)
Re:There's more than one type of addiction (Score:1)
In any case, I roll my own from additive-free tobacco.
Re:There's more than one type of addiction (Score:3, Informative)
Re:There's more than one type of addiction (Score:2)
If you can refocus your attention onto something else - say, a lollipop, or a toothpick - then you accomplish the bulk of what this is trying to do, namely, get people off of cigarettes.
I'd love to see
Re:There's more than one type of addiction (Score:2, Insightful)
Totally. The way it is now strikes me as a forced cold-turkey situation. Certainly these people go through withdrawl symptoms just like any other person trying to quit.
Re:There's more than one type of addiction (Score:2)
Re:There's more than one type of addiction (Score:1)
Re:There's more than one type of addiction (Score:2)
Re:There's more than one type of addiction (Score:1)
"but I don't see how it would help psychological addiction."
If this proves to be safe, then you can just sit back and watch what effect is.
I myself used to smoke, and think it probably was more of a psychological addiction because I didn't think it was that hard to quit! So put that in you pipe and smoke it!
Re:There's more than one type of addiction (Score:1)
My point is not only that it might not help all smokers, but that it might hurt the smokers who are both physically and psychologically addicted by sending them through physical withdrawls yet not helping the other part of their addiction.
I agree with you, though, that if it has the potential to help certain smokers, it ought to be given a shot.
Re:There's more than one type of addiction (Score:2)
Re:There's more than one type of addiction (Score:3, Insightful)
After several years, I started again. In the meantime, I started taking Wellbutrin (Zyban). Even though I didn't take it to quit smoking (I took it for ADD/depression), the Wellbutrin mad
Re:There's more than one type of addiction (Score:1)
They need to get this down to one shot (Score:5, Insightful)
They need to get this vaccine down to something that can be administered in one visit, so people don't have a chance to get cold feet after the begining.
If they can make this something joe six-pack-a-day can just do one afternoon on an impulse, then I'll be really impressed.
Of course, then how long will it be until cigarette companies come out with anti-vacine cigs?
Re:They need to get this down to one shot (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:They need to get this down to one shot (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:They need to get this down to one shot (Score:1)
Re:They need to get this down to one shot (Score:2)
So, if it was possible to administer the vaccine in a single dose, the subject goes through all the withdrawal essentially at once, with no possibility of sneaking a couple of smokes to take the edge off. That could be cruel. Is it possible that the multiple dose aspect is considered a feature, not a bug?
Re:They need to get this down to one shot (Score:1)
Oh... That's dastardly!
I'm worried that someone will decide that it's necessary for people to be vaccinated against smoking. I can easily see parents vaccinating their children at a young age, corporations requiring that as part of a 'Smoke free workplace' policy employee's be vaccinated, insurance providers not providing to those who are not vaccinated, or the government forcing people to be vaccinated either
Fucking Smokers (Score:3, Troll)
Ever notice what happens when a smoker opens up a fresh pack? The plastic wrap goes onto the ground. Then, once the smoke is finished, it goes onto the ground too. When the pack is finished, it tends to end up on the ground too. In other words, smokers are some of the most sociopathic polluting assholes on the planet! Ever have a look around a typical smoking area around, say, a public building? Butts everywhere, despite the usual presence of buttcans and ashtrays. They don't use them or need them, because they consider the world as their ashtray!
Fucking assholes! These people don't need a vaccine to deal with their smoking problem. They need a simple boot in the ass, or several hundred as the case may be, to teach them a much needed lesson about simple politeness and courtesy! All before even getting into the usual controversies about polluting the air that I have to breathe without my consent.
Re:Fucking Smokers (Score:2)
Re:Fucking Smokers (Score:1)
Thanks!
Re:Fucking Smokers (Score:5, Funny)
If you don't have to put up with this trash all over the place, then consider yourself lucky. It's a part of daily existence where I am. despite fairly and increasingly stringent anti-smoking regulations.
Re:Fucking Smokers (Score:2)
Re:Fucking Smokers (Score:2)
Fucking Whiners (Score:5, Funny)
Ever notice what happens when a whiner opens their mouth? The first thing out of it is a bitch session about how someone else is screwing up their life. Once the stop frothing at the mouth about that, they have to start rebutting others. Then, they whine about getting modded down on Slashdot. In other words, whiners are some of the most sociopathic assholes on the planet! Ever have a look at the social habits of whiners? They empty a bar in no time. They don't need to go out because everyone hates them already, but they do anyway, just to make others unhappy.
Fucking assholes! These people don't need a vaccine to deal with their whining problem. They need a simple boot in the ass, or several hundred as the case may be, to teach them a much needed lesson about simple politeness and courtesy! All before getting into the usual controversies about what impact whining has on the economy, or how it kills kittens.
Only when there is a point to be made. [n/t] (Score:2)
Re:Fucking Smokers (Score:2)
Will you be so kind to keep those fundamentalist overtones f
Re:Fucking Smokers (Score:2)
As for the USA comment, I'm Canadian, you insensitive clod! At least we have a 98% success rate at beer bottle returns!
Re:Fucking Smokers (Score:2)
See, there's this notion you seem to have that I, as a smoker, am somehow a member of the Secret Brotherhood of International Smoking Initiates, or something, and therefore am both responsible for the behaviour of other smokers as well as capable of influencing their behaviour.
Both assumptions are of course completely and utterly silly.
If you disagree that these assumptions are silly, then get back to me with your success rate at convincing all your fellow Canadians
Re:Fucking Smokers (Score:3, Interesting)
So, what do you do when you need a smoke, and you can't find an ashtray? You realize that, the way you phrased it, it sounds like you think it is okay, if you can't find an ashtray, to light up anyway, and throw your butts on the floor? Is this what you meant?
When I was young, and full of beans, I used to get into confrontations with people smoking in places where sm
Re:Fucking Smokers (Score:2)
Let's try these on for size:
Re:Fucking Smokers (Score:1)
Filters are made with cellulose acetate, a plastic which is slow to degrade.And they're packed full enough of toxic chemicals from the smoke to be an ecological hazard. [longwood.edu]
Woods fires are generally ventilated so that the vast majorit
Re:Fucking Smokers (Score:2)
Help (Score:2)
I've tried the patch, the gums, even managed to quit without any nicotinic surrogate (which being the only period totally off nicotine I consider my only true success) for as much as 8 months but I've always relapsed.
Ask your doctor for some Wellbutrin. (sorry...tried to look up a link for you but all I get from Google is online pharmacy ads) It's a mood elevator but it appears to be very good at relieving nicotine cravings. I know people who have used it to quit smoking and said that it was totally ef
Re:Help (Score:2)
Re:Help (Score:3, Informative)
Bupropion [nami.org]. Manufactured by GlaxoSmithKline. Also sold under the name Zyban.
Non-smokers Uber Allies (Score:1)
Re:Fucking Smokers (Score:1)
The same basic problem here, causes all sorts of things. A false normality.
A smokers world is different than non-smokers in one big way, smoking. (duh!)
Non-smokers see polution, litter, poor smell, bad health decisions, and a ton of other things. smokers see this as thier normal way of life. The smoke, the stench, the yellowing teeth, all normal. Just like how popping joints can become second nature.
One thing that really pisses me off are people who smoke around thier kids. A parent holding thier baby wi
Re:Fucking Smokers (Score:2)
Let's try these on for size:
Re:Fucking Smokers (Score:1)
Never Smoke - Yummy Ashtrays Full Of Crud! (Score:4, Insightful)
I can deal with the problem of smokers not being able to quit their filthy disgusting habit,
I think you fail to understand the nature of addiction. It must be a nice perspective that you have.
The craving for a cigarette feels every bit as instinctive, internal and hard-wired as the cravings for food, sex, and a trip to the bathroom when the bladder is full.
If you, presumably as someone who has never smoked, wishes to understand the agony of quitting smoking, I suggest that you simply deny yourself peeing for a week. Tell me how it feels. That's exactly what quitting smoking is like.
Most attempts to quit smoking never make it past the first day. The worst for me was always day three.
After a week or so, the brain starts to get over the cravings, but they never really completely go away.
Ever notice what happens when a smoker opens up a fresh pack? The plastic wrap goes onto the ground.
Not mine; even when I accidentally drop it, I pick it up and take it to the trash.
Then, once the smoke is finished, it goes onto the ground too.
That happens because all the anti-smokers ran around, from the depths of their ignorance about the nature of the nicotine addiction, screaming that "If we take the ashtrays out of public places people won't smoke!".
Bullshit. I have been in a situation where I could have sex or I could smoke - this was an ex who told me that we'd have sex if I didn't smoke that evening. Guess which one won out?
So, if flicking a butt on the ground - which is abhorrent to me - is the cost of having a cigarette, then it's a cost I will bear. Again, I've foregone sex for it.
I would use ashtrays if they were around. I'm not putting the butts in the garbage can; I'm sure you can appreciate the risk of fire.
When the pack is finished, it tends to end up on the ground too. In other words, smokers are some of the most sociopathic polluting assholes on the planet! Ever have a look around a typical smoking area around, say, a public building? Butts everywhere, despite the usual presence of buttcans and ashtrays. They don't use them or need them, because they consider the world as their ashtray!
When you smoke outside, you're so accustomed to the lack of an outdoor ashtray that you reflexively toss the butt on the ground. It's unfortunate.
Fucking assholes! These people don't need a vaccine to deal with their smoking problem. They need a simple boot in the ass, or several hundred as the case may be, to teach them a much needed lesson about simple politeness and courtesy!
I agree with the littering, but I wouldn't agree that smokers throw their empty packs or wrappers on the ground any more than the various sasquatches who throw gum wrappers and losing lottery tickets on the ground.
The only way to address the butt litter will be to have more ashtrays in more public places, but that's not going to happen because of all the idiots who will say it encourages smoking. (Heh... looking at an ashtray always grosses me out; if anything, it's a deterrent.)
All before even getting into the usual controversies about polluting the air that I have to breathe without my consent.
Well, for the most part, it will only affect you in a bar or restaurant. Smoking in the workplace is essentially verboten now.
Coping with it is very simple. If you don't like smoke, sit in the non-smoking section of that bar or restaurant. If they don't have a non-smoking section, go to a bar or restaurant which does.
"Quitting smoking is easy; I have done it a thousand times." - Mark Twain.
Smoking is:
Use a pocket ashtray or smoke unfiltered (Score:2)
No, it's exactly the kind of unthinking lameness the original poster was complaining about.
During the 20 years I smoked I never threw a butt on the ground. My friends that still smoke don't do it now. Just strip the biodegradable bits off and put the filter in your pocket until you find an appropriate receptacle.
And yes, I occasionally forgot and ran one t
Re:Fucking Smokers (Score:1)
As for smokers throwing the plastic wrap on the ground, there is something called "Littering" and they can be fined. The butts, well cant throw them in the garbage while they're still lit otherwise it'll cause a fire.
First off, I take it you're not a smoker, so you dont know the addiction first hand. I suggest you get a first hand experience with the addiction before you say "they need a kick in the ass".
Re:Not even close (Score:2)
Lont time smoker's point of view (Score:5, Insightful)
Before I get all the replies describing all the side effects of smoking, you should know that I can do 150 push-ups every day, I can ride a bicycle for 30kms in about an hour through Toronto (which has its share of hills). So I'm still pretty healthy. When I'll get older this won't be the case anymore, but that's still a way off, so it doesn't feel like such a threat.
I guess this vaccine might work for me. If I can't derive pleasure from smoking, then I might have a chance of quitting. Because my willpower in this respect sure isn't helping.
Re:Lont time smoker's point of view (Score:2)
This is pretty consistent with what most of my friends who smoke tell me. A number of years ago I heard a story on NPR about addiction. They interviewed a representative from a national drug agency (perhaps NIH, I don't recall). What he emphasized was that it's not the physical addiction that's the problem, we can
Re:Lont time smoker's point of view (Score:1)
But in reading your post, I realized that I'm not sure what constitutes a psychological addiction. Is it simply the pleasure, as you suggest? Because most of my friends emphasize the role of stimuli. It's easy to quit smoking -- until you go out to a bar or coffee house, or you've been driving for 30 minutes, or you're at a party, etc.
Damn right it's the stimuli. I've tried to quit several times before, and at one point even got to the 3 month mark. No physical cravings at all were left after that much
Zyban (Score:2)
Re:Zyban (Score:2)
Re:Lont time smoker's point of view (Score:2)
Re:Lont time smoker's point of view (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Lont time smoker's point of view (Score:1)
Quitting Smoking With Smokin' Pencils ... (Score:1)
From the Article
I guess another way to
Re:Quitting Smoking With Smokin' Pencils ... (Score:1)
Re:Quitting Smoking With Smokin' Pencils ... (Score:2)
It's not really a flaw, it is the strength. Extending my ealier "logical" arguements ...
Using the vaccine, once you discover cigs don't get you "high" any longer, you would find something else to get a similar "high." And this is called crossing the "gateway", i.e a gateway drug. And worse you might never get the same high with anything else, and you will be setting on an endless search ...
By smoking pencils you know that cigs can still get you high if you want to. And you don't need to go around chasi
Re:Quitting Smoking With Smokin' Pencils ... (Score:1)
Re:Quitting Smoking With Smokin' Pencils ... (Score:2)
The danger of cigarettes is not the nicotine. It's the smoke. Smoking nicotine-less cigarettes could still give you cancer. Chewing nicotine gum probably won't.
Reason Magazine has a pretty interesting article ("Snuff Treatment: Lying in the name of public health" [reason.com]) about the US gub'mint lying to us about the dangers of chewing tabacco. Even though it is 90% less hazardous than cigarette smoking, numerous US health agencies repeatedly claim chewing tabacco is "just as dangerous" as smoking cigarettes.
Re:Quitting Smoking With Smokin' Pencils ... (Score:2)
Yeah. Something puzzles me about this. Your analogy of "Smoke a pencil! It's unpleasant!" hits it on the head. Smokers, riddle me this. (I'm a nonsmoker.)
An alcoholic who likes the taste of beer can drink non-alcoholic beer. (OK, obviously he doesn't like the taste of beer that much, but you get my drift :) He's doing himself no harm. I don't think I'd even call him a "drinker".
A reformed caffei
Re:Quitting Smoking With Smokin' Pencils ... (Score:2)
Because all of the other delivery devices have dangerous side effects.
There is no way other than cigarettes that give the same amount of nicotine in a condensed burst without causing the user to throw up, or hav
Easy to quit... (Score:3, Insightful)
If you WANT to quit, you will. You don't need any drugs, devices, or enemas.
Everyone I know who has tried (and failed) to quit, failed because they did not want to quit smoking. They tried to quit because they just felt they should.
You can quit when you actually WANT too.
Mind over matter, and shit like that....
Re:Easy to quit... (Score:2)
If you WANT to quit, you will. You don't need any drugs, devices, or enemas.
Everyone I know who has tried (and failed) to quit, failed because they did not want to quit smoking. They tried to quit because they just felt they should.
You can quit when you actually WANT too.
Mind over matter, and shit like that....
Having quit smoking myself a few months ago I absolutely agree ! If you don't like to quit you won't make it. I wanted to quit because my girlfriend smokes too much. She kept coughing
Re:Easy to quit... (Score:3, Interesting)
Never underestimate the power of a physical addiction, my friend.
Having been a former smoker, I can tell you I wanted to quit. I wanted to quit about 1700 times. I succeeded on the 1700th try. You know its bad for you, you can feel it every day when you light up, but there's that tinge of happiness that comes from the action.
It's been 10 years since I quit and even now there are still times I'm jamming
Re:Easy to quit... (Score:1)
I hear ya... I chewed for 10+ years. I shouldn't have said it was "easy"... and yes, I still crave it from time to time. Nicotine is nasty!
But still, when I actually wanted to quit, I did.
How long before... (Score:5, Interesting)
good idea (Score:2)
Of course, it shouldn't be mandatory. But it should be offered free to any parent who wants it for their child. And it should be carefully tested and monitored initially to make sure it doesn't have any unintended consequences.
Re:bad idea (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:bad idea (Score:2)
How lucky that you managed to quit. Most teenagers who start can't quit, and they lose decades of their lives.
the experience of feeling the effects of different drugs should not be robbed from people without their consent.
Parents have the right to have parts of their children's penises removed without their consent and with little demonstrable benefit. Talk about robbing people of experiences. I'd worry about that long before I'd worry robbi
Re:bad idea (Score:1)
Re:bad idea (Score:2)
Erm... now, I'd be against the government or any other entrenched institution making it mandatory (nothing quite like mandatory vaccinations against "illegal" or "immoral" behavior, is there?) but give me a break! That's like saying that people should not be robbed of feeling the effects of different diseases without their consent. It could be argued that there's the difference in being i
Re:bad idea (Score:1)
While I agree in principle with your idea, it would never work. The reason those compounds get people "high" is because they are very similar to substances that occur naturally in the body. Good idea, make kids immune to their own brain chemicals.
Even if that problem could be solved, which I doubt, those compounds have therapeutic uses. Cocaine is a p
Re:bad idea (Score:2)
Exactly. Even if you manage to chemically disable all of the major drugs during childhood, people who really want to get high will find a way. There's always whipped cream, spray paint, plastic bags, etc.
or.. (Score:2)
Rus
Re:or.. (Score:2)
Re:or.. (Score:2, Insightful)
The whole 'ban smoking' thing sounds pretty fascistic, though. It's a plant that grows naturally. It's an activity that many people enjoy. The fact that other people (busybodies) disapprove isn't really relevant.
Maybe we should ban a whole lot of things that make people less pro
Re:or.. (Score:1)
radical proposal (Score:2)
Actually, go ahead and stop when the minimum age becomes 45, and the "for grown-ups-only" aspect that wanting-to-define-themselves teenagers are looking for will be seriously diminished.
Seriously, the RJR-Nabisco anti-smoking ads are the worst thing public policy could allow... they say "little baby kid
how I stopped (Score:5, Interesting)
Anyway, my friend said that as soon as she switched to American Spirit, she just didn't feel the need to smoke as much and the though of it kind of disgusted her. So I switched too.
After about a month, the very thought of smoking just disgusted me to the point where I stopped doing it. I started smoking their strongest ones, of which I could only finish about half a cigarette, then went to the medium, then their ultra-lights.
It's ironic using cigarettes to quit smoking, but it worked for me. The only side-effects I've had is that I feel much better. The smell of smoke in bars even disgusts me now.
Re:how I stopped (Score:1)
Frankly, I wish all the money that we're taking from the Tobacco companies in settlements, all the money we spend on anti-tobacco ads, all the money we take in to taxes on tobacco, and, heck, throw in the money we spent developing this vaccine had gone in to Lung Cancer (or just Cancer-in-general) Research.
But, it didn't, and it won't. It goes to lawyers. It goes to pork. It goes to propping up a overly
Re:additives & diary of an addiction (Score:2)
I started smoking a few years ago with cigars. At first I would puff one once in a while because it was something to do with my friends. I would not inhale ( who the hell inh
Re:additives & diary of an addiction (Score:2)
Re:additives & diary of an addiction (Score:2)
nicotine (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:nicotine (Score:1)
This just shows how much people have blindly accepted the view that if you smoke, you're worse than Hitler. People will recklessly modify their immune systems to "vaccinate" themselves from nicotine addiction.
I'd rather die a much more "natural" cancer death, than die from a statistically insignificant reaction to a "vaccine" put out by a company looking to make a quick buck on the misery of others.
BTW, cold turkey 2 years ago after smoking for 11.
I'm glad (Score:1)
Yeah, I used them patches but it was because I love my friends, anyone who knows someone who quit smoking cold turkey knows what I mean
Anyways, I'm glad because at least I can feel prouder about having quit with littler help than those future vaccinated guys.
Also, patches help you a lot psychologically because it's very very gradual. You have about four months to give up the patches and during that time you learn to kick off addiction, it's
Smoker's high? Really? I'm missing out. (Score:1)
It might be that there is an effect, one so subtle as to escape my notice, but if it's that subtle I doubt it factors greatly in my addiction.
If they could invent a drug that would stop me from feeling like Spike Spiegel e
Don't Start (Score:1, Flamebait)
I'll be honest, I don't care how many people smoke, or how much death or suffering it causes (second-hand smoking deaths are grossly exaggerated if you read the current research about it). I've loved very few people who was actually stupid enough to start.
If you are such a fucking moron that you start smoking, then you will eventually reduce the surface population by one smoker, and my clothes won't stink as much when I go to the club. I just hope that it happens before they have c
Re:Don't Start (Score:2)
Re:Don't Start (Score:2)
I smoke. I'm not a moron.
Why? Addiction. Moderation. I fucking like the taste.
So, I'm probably gonna die a few years sooner than every other non-smoker just because I chose a disgusting (to some), expensive habit. Big deal.
If it were discovered tomorrow that bananas were deadly, we'd still be eating them. McDonald's food is unhealthy, but the parking lot is still packed and the drive-thru is backed up every lunch hour of every day. It all
Before you start on rants: a nicotine *vaccine* (Score:1)
(1) A nicotine vaccine does NOT solve the chemical addiction at all. Your body would still have the cravings for the a cigarette, because when you smoke it...the nicotine doesn't make it to the brain. Your brain still yells out: "give me something to stop this withdrawal"
(2) A nicotine vaccine actually would help the emotional side of the addiction. The emotional addictions follows thus: your body needs a chemical,
Re:Only a matter of time before it's mandatory (Score:3, Informative)
That's a load if I ever saw one. Go have a look at the incidence of childhood asthma among children with parents who smoke versus those who don't. Come back and let us know what you find.
Consider that the University of Wisconsin medical school estimates annual health care costs of $4.6 billion for treating the asthma, ear, and respiratory infections of kids living in smoking households.
I watched my g
Re:Only a matter of time before it's mandatory (Score:2)
Re:Only a matter of time before it's mandatory (Score:3, Insightful)
Whatever happened to freedom?
I'm all for your freedom to smoke whatever you want. I'm all against the tobacco corporations' freedom to sell a product that addicts people and kills 1200 of them each and every day. What kind of civilized society allows corporations to kill 1200 people a day? Even the 9/11 hijackers weren't that bloodthirsty.
Stupid people make stupid things profitable.
Exactly. Like smoking.
Re:Only a matter of time before it's mandatory (Score:2)
I'll chime in here with my own point of view:
I'm all for your freedom to smoke whatever you want. I'm all for the tobacco corporations' freedom to sell a product that addicts people and kills 1200 of them each and every day. I'm all against me hav
Re:Only a matter of time before it's mandatory (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm all for the tobacco corporations' freedom to sell a product that addicts people and kills 1200 of them each and every day.
I'm all against me having to pay for it in the form of medical expenses for cancer patients who have been life-long smokers, even though they KNEW it would cause cancer.
Thanks for demonstrating the cold, hard, calloused heart of the modern laissez-faire capitalist.
It's fine for a corporation to murderously addict an ignorant segment of the population to their product as long a