2025.06.17 (화)

  • 구름많음동두천 17.6℃
  • 맑음강릉 20.3℃
  • 구름많음서울 18.2℃
  • 맑음대전 18.5℃
  • 맑음대구 19.0℃
  • 맑음울산 20.0℃
  • 맑음광주 18.4℃
  • 맑음부산 19.1℃
  • 맑음고창 18.4℃
  • 맑음제주 21.3℃
  • 구름많음강화 15.3℃
  • 구름조금보은 17.3℃
  • 맑음금산 18.1℃
  • 맑음강진군 18.7℃
  • 구름조금경주시 20.7℃
  • 맑음거제 19.7℃
기상청 제공
기사검색

Genes make difference if quitting smoking

Genes make difference if quitting smoking

 

Genetics can predict success of smoking cessation and whether a person is likely to respond to drugs for nicotine addiction, U.S. researchers say.

 

“We found that the effects of smoking cessation medications depend on a person’s genes,” first author Dr. Li Shiun Chen of the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, said in a statement.

  

The research focused on specific variations in a cluster of nicotinic receptor genes, CHRNA5 CHRNA3 CHRNB4, which prior studies have shown contribute to nicotine dependence and heavy smoking, Chen said.

 

The researchers used data from the National Heart Lung and Blood Institute and showed that individuals carrying the high risk form of this gene cluster reported a two year delay in the median quit age compared to those with the low risk genes.

 

This delay was attributable to a pattern of heavier smoking among those with the high risk gene cluster.

 

The researchers then conducted a clinical trial, which confirmed that persons with the high risk genes were more likely to fail in their quit attempts compared to those with the low risk genes when treated with placebo. However, medications approved for nicotine cessation    such as nicotine replacement therapies or bupropion    increased the likelihood of abstinence in the high risk groups.

 

In addition, those with the highest risk had a three fold increase in their odds of being abstinent at the end of active treatment compared to placebo, indicating that these medications may be particularly beneficial for this population.

 

The study was published in the American Journal of Psychiatry.

  

관련기사 PDF보기