859 resultados para nicotine addiction


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OBJECTIVE: To study acute hemodynamic alterations in the fetal-placental maternal system immediately after maternal exposure to nicotine. METHODS: This is a noncontrolled experimental study involving 21 pregnant smoking women, randomly selected, with uncomplicated pregnancies and without risk factors for fetal heart disease. Patients underwent ultrasound and fetal echocardiography before and after smoking a cigarette. They were asked to abstain from smoking for 12 hours before the study. The mean nicotine content of the cigarettes used in the study was 0.5mg of nicotine and 6mg of carbon monoxide. RESULTS: The average number of cigarettes smoked per a day prior to the study was 9.67. Gestational age ranged between 18 and 36 weeks. The mean maternal heart rate was elevated (P<0.001) as was the mean fetal heart rate (P=0.044). Maternal systolic blood pressure (P=0.004) and diastolic blood pressure (P=0.033) were also elevated after smoking. A decrease occurred in the systolic/diastolic ratio in the right uterine artery (P=0.014) and in the left uterine artery (P=0.039). The other hemodynamic variables remained unchanged. CONCLUSION: Cigarette smoking can cause changes in physiologic variables of fetal-placental circulation, but it does not change fetal cardiac function, in the dose of nicotine and its components used in this study. The decrease in systolic/diastolic ratio in the uterine arteries is probably related to a dose-dependent nicotine pattern.

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The author has studied the influence of acetylcholine solutions directly applied on the motor cortex of dogs, cats monkeys and rabbits. For this purpose small squares of filter paper were soaked in the acetylcholine solution and soon afterwards laid on the motor cortex. Solutions varying from 0,2 to 10 per cent have been experimented. It has been shown that local application of the solutions on the motor points, previously localized by induction coil, produced motor reactions. It has been found, in the dogs that 10 per cent acetylcholine solutions cause localized muscular twitchings (clonus) in almost all the animals experimented. Generalised epileptiform convulsions were obtained in44,4% of the dogs. Convulsions were also obtained by employing 1 per cent solution of acetylcholine. Definite response has been obtained with 0,2 per cent solution. Failure of motor action, pointed out by other authors, has been related to the use of anesthetics. Convulsions were easily produced by rapid light mechanical stimulations of the skin covering the muscles in conection with the excited motor point, and the application on the motor point of acetylcholine. The results on monkeys can be summarized as follows. Two species of monkeys were experimented: Cebus capucinus and Macaca mulata. In the monkeys C. capucinus generalised convulsive reactions were induced with actylcholine solutions in a concentration as low as 0,5 per cent. Motor reaction or convulsive seizeres were obtained in seven of the eight monkeys used. Three monkeys M. mulata were stimulated with 10 per cent acetylcholine solution but only localized muscular contraction hae been observed. Similar results has been obtained on the motor cortex of cats and rabbits. One of the three cats employed has shown epileptiform convulsions and the remaining only localized muscular contractions. In the rabbits muscular twitchings have been also induced. The sensitizing power of eserine on the action of acetylcholine has been also searched. The results indicate that a previous application of eserine solution on the motor center, potentiates the action of acetylcholine. The intensity of the muscular twitchings is greater than the obtained before the application of the eserine solution. Generalised epileptiform convulsions sometimes appeared following the use of lower concentrations of acetylcholine than those previously employed. Experiments have been carried out by injecting eserine and prostigmine by parenteral route. A dosis dufficient for induce small muscular tremors did not enhance obviously the motor effects produced by the application of the acetylcholine solutions on the motor cortex. From seven dogs experimented, all previously tested for convulsive seiruzes by application of 1 and 10 per cent acetylcholine solution with negative results, only one has shown epileptiform convulsions after the injection of prostigmine. Morphine has also been tested as facilitating substance for convulsions induced by acetylcholine. Six from the nine dogs submitted to the experiments, developed epileptiform seizures after injection of morphine and stimulation of the motor cortex with acetylcholine. (Table IV). In another series of experiments atropine and nicotine have been studied as for to their action on the motor effects of acetylcholine. Nicotine has a strong convulsant action, even when employed in very high concentration. Since a depressant effect has not appeared even by the applications of high concentrations of nicotine in the motor corteõ of dogs, unlike the classical observations for the autonomus nervous system, it was not possible to verify the action of acetylcholine on a motor center paralised by nicotine. It is important to not that the motor phenomena observed after the first aplication of acetylcholine, can desappear by the renewal of the pieces of filter paper soaked in the acetylcholine solution. Atropine, either applied on the motor point in low concentration, or injected in sufficient amount for inhibiting the “muscarinic effects” of acetylcholine on the autonomous nervous system, did not prevent the motor reactions of acetylcholine on the cerebral cortex.

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The "Five-Day Plan to Stop Smoking" (FDP) is an educational group technique for smoking cessation. We studied a cohort of 123 smokers (55 men, 68 women, mean age 42 years) who participated in 11 successive FDP sessions held in Switzerland between 1995 and 1998 and who were followed up for at least 12 months by telephone or direct interview. Overall, 102 of the 123 subjects (83%) had stopped smoking by the end of the FDP, and self-declared smoking cessation rate was 25% after one year. The following factors potentially associated with outcome were studied: age, sex, smoking habit duration, cigarettes per day, Fagerström Test for Nicotine Dependence (FTND), group size, and medical presence among the group leaders. Smoking habit duration was the only variable which showed a statistically significant association with success: the rate of smoking cessation was higher among patients who had smoked for less than 20 years (34.7% vs. 18.9%, p = 0.049). Stress was the most common cause of relapse. The FDP appears to be an effective smoking cessation therapy. Propositions are made in order to improve the success rate of future sessions.

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BACKGROUND: A possible strategy for increasing smoking cessation rates could be to provide smokers who have contact with healthcare systems with feedback on the biomedical or potential future effects of smoking, e.g. measurement of exhaled carbon monoxide (CO), lung function, or genetic susceptibility to lung cancer. OBJECTIVES: To determine the efficacy of biomedical risk assessment provided in addition to various levels of counselling, as a contributing aid to smoking cessation. SEARCH STRATEGY: We systematically searched the Cochrane Collaboration Tobacco Addiction Group Specialized Register, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials 2008 Issue 4, MEDLINE (1966 to January 2009), and EMBASE (1980 to January 2009). We combined methodological terms with terms related to smoking cessation counselling and biomedical measurements. SELECTION CRITERIA: Inclusion criteria were: a randomized controlled trial design; subjects participating in smoking cessation interventions; interventions based on a biomedical test to increase motivation to quit; control groups receiving all other components of intervention; an outcome of smoking cessation rate at least six months after the start of the intervention. DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS: Two assessors independently conducted data extraction on each paper, with disagreements resolved by consensus. Results were expressed as a relative risk (RR) for smoking cessation with 95% confidence intervals (CI). Where appropriate a pooled effect was estimated using a Mantel-Haenszel fixed effect method. MAIN RESULTS: We included eleven trials using a variety of biomedical tests. Two pairs of trials had sufficiently similar recruitment, setting and interventions to calculate a pooled effect; there was no evidence that CO measurement in primary care (RR 1.06, 95% CI 0.85 to 1.32) or spirometry in primary care (RR 1.18, 95% CI 0.77 to 1.81) increased cessation rates. We did not pool the other seven trials. One trial in primary care detected a significant benefit of lung age feedback after spirometry (RR 2.12; 95% CI 1.24 to 3.62). One trial that used ultrasonography of carotid and femoral arteries and photographs of plaques detected a benefit (RR 2.77; 95% CI 1.04 to 7.41) but enrolled a population of light smokers. Five trials failed to detect evidence of a significant effect. One of these tested CO feedback alone and CO + genetic susceptibility as two different intervention; none of the three possible comparisons detected significant effects. Three others used a combination of CO and spirometry feedback in different settings, and one tested for a genetic marker. AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: There is little evidence about the effects of most types of biomedical tests for risk assessment. Spirometry combined with an interpretation of the results in terms of 'lung age' had a significant effect in a single good quality trial. Mixed quality evidence does not support the hypothesis that other types of biomedical risk assessment increase smoking cessation in comparison to standard treatment. Only two pairs of studies were similar enough in term of recruitment, setting, and intervention to allow meta-analysis.

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It was found recently that locomotor and rewarding effects of psychostimulants and opiates were dramatically decreased or suppressed in mice lacking alpha1b-adrenergic receptors [alpha1b-adrenergic receptor knock-outs (alpha1bAR-KOs)] (Drouin et al., 2002). Here we show that blunted locomotor responses induced by 3 and 6 mg/kg d-amphetamine in alpha1bAR-KO mice [-84 and -74%, respectively, when compared with wild-type (WT) mice] are correlated with an absence of d-amphetamine-induced increase in extracellular dopamine (DA) levels in the nucleus accumbens of alpha1bAR-KO mice. Moreover, basal extracellular DA levels in the nucleus accumbens are lower in alpha1bAR-KO than in WT littermates (-28%; p < 0.001). In rats however, prazosin, an alpha1-adrenergic antagonist, decreases d-amphetamine-induced locomotor hyperactivity without affecting extracellular DA levels in the nucleus accumbens, a finding related to the presence of an important nonfunctional release of DA (Darracq et al., 1998). We show here that local d-amphetamine releases nonfunctional DA with the same affinity but a more than threefold lower amplitude in C57BL6/J mice than in Sprague Dawley rats. Altogether, this suggests that a trans-synaptic mechanism amplifies functional DA into nonfunctional DA release. Our data confirm the presence of a powerful coupling between noradrenergic and dopaminergic neurons through the stimulation of alpha1b-adrenergic receptors and indicate that nonfunctional DA release is critical in the interpretation of changes in extracellular DA levels. These results suggest that alpha1b-adrenergic receptors may be important therapeutic pharmacological targets not only in addiction but also in psychosis because most neuroleptics possess anti-alpha1-adrenergic properties.

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Elevated schizotypy relates to similar cognitive attenuations as seen in psychosis and cannabis/polydrug use. Also, in schizotypal populations cannabis and polydrug (including licit drug) use are enhanced.These cognitive attenuations may therefore either be a behavioral marker of psychotic (-like) symptoms or the consequence of enhanced drug use in schizotypal populations.To elucidate this, we investigated the link between cognitive attenuation and cannabis use in largely pure cannabis users (35) and non-using controls (48), accounting for the potential additional influence of both schizotypy and licit drug use (alcohol, nicotine). Cognitive attenuations commonly seen in psychosis were associated with cannabis and alcohol use, but not schizotypy. Future studies should therefore consider (i) non-excessive licit substance use (e.g., alcohol) in studies investigating the effect of cannabis use on cognition and (ii) both enhanced illicit and licit substance use in studies investigating cognition in schizotypal populations.

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INTRODUCTION: We examined the positive and negative subjective feelings associated with initial tobacco and cannabis use as well as the role of these experiences in regular use. Additionally, we investigated the effect of the first substance experienced on initial subjective experiences and later regular use. METHODS: Baseline data from a representative sample of young Swiss men were obtained from an ongoing Cohort Study on Substance Use Risk Factors, which includes 2,321 lifetime tobacco and cannabis users. We assessed the age of first tobacco and cannabis use along with the subjective experiences associated with initial use. Additionally, subjective experiences related to regular use of both substances were analyzed. RESULTS: The initial subjective experiences were divided into positive and negative for each substance, and we found that the feelings associated with first use of tobacco and cannabis were similar. Moreover, the participants who used cannabis before tobacco reported fewer negative experiences associated with first tobacco use, whereas the participants who initially used tobacco reported more negative experiences related to first cannabis use. Also, we identified that regular use was encouraged by positive experiences and that negative experiences were more adverse for regular use of cannabis compared with tobacco. CONCLUSIONS: Taken together, these results indicate that similar subjective experiences were associated with the first use of tobacco and cannabis. Also, the use of cannabis before tobacco, which occurred in only a minority of users, had the potential to enhance the effects of initial tobacco use.

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BACKGROUND: Screening of peripheral atherosclerosis is increasingly used, but few trials have examined its clinical impact. We aimed to assess whether carotid plaque screening helps smokers to improve their health behaviors and cardiovascular risk factors. METHODS: We randomly assigned 536 smokers aged 40 to 70 years to carotid plaque ultrasonographic screening (US group) vs no screening (control group) in addition to individual counseling and nicotine replacement therapy for all participants. Smokers with at least 1 plaque received pictures of their plaques with a 7-minute structured explanation. The outcomes included biochemically validated smoking cessation at 12 months (primary outcome) and changes in cardiovascular risk factor levels and Framingham risk score. RESULTS: At baseline, participants (mean age, 51.1 years; 45.0% women) smoked an average of 20 cigarettes per day with a median duration of 32 years. The US group had a high prevalence of carotid plaques (57.9%). At 12 months, smoking cessation rates were high, but did not differ between the US and control groups (24.9% vs 22.1%; P = .45). In the US group, cessation rates did not differ according to the presence or absence of plaques. Control of cardiovascular risk factors (ie, blood pressure and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and hemoglobin A(1c) levels in diabetic patients) and mean absolute risk change in Framingham risk score did not differ between the groups. The mean absolute risk change in Framingham risk score was +0.6 in the US group vs +0.3 in the control group (P = .56). CONCLUSION: In smokers, carotid plaque screening performed in addition to thorough smoking cessation counseling is not associated with increased rates of smoking cessation or control of cardiovascular risk factors. Trial Registration  clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00548665.

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Clinical responses to anticancer therapies are often restricted to a subset of patients. In some cases, mutated cancer genes are potent biomarkers for responses to targeted agents. Here, to uncover new biomarkers of sensitivity and resistance to cancer therapeutics, we screened a panel of several hundred cancer cell lines--which represent much of the tissue-type and genetic diversity of human cancers--with 130 drugs under clinical and preclinical investigation. In aggregate, we found that mutated cancer genes were associated with cellular response to most currently available cancer drugs. Classic oncogene addiction paradigms were modified by additional tissue-specific or expression biomarkers, and some frequently mutated genes were associated with sensitivity to a broad range of therapeutic agents. Unexpected relationships were revealed, including the marked sensitivity of Ewing's sarcoma cells harbouring the EWS (also known as EWSR1)-FLI1 gene translocation to poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitors. By linking drug activity to the functional complexity of cancer genomes, systematic pharmacogenomic profiling in cancer cell lines provides a powerful biomarker discovery platform to guide rational cancer therapeutic strategies.

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ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: Recent data indicate a slight decrease in the prevalence of smoking in Switzerland, but little is known regarding the intention and difficulty to quit smoking among current smokers. Hence, we aimed to quantify the difficulty and intention to quit smoking among current smokers in Switzerland. METHODS: Cross-sectional study including 607 female and 658 male smokers. Difficulty, intention and motivation to quit smoking were assessed by questionnaire. RESULTS: 90% of women and 85% of men reported being "very difficult" or "difficult" to quit smoking. Almost three quarters of smokers (73% of women and 71% of men) intended to quit; however, less than 20% of them were in the preparation stage and 40% were in the precontemplation stage. On multivariate analysis, difficulty to quit was lower among men (Odds ratio and 95% [confidence interval]: 0.51 [0.35-0.74]) and increased with nicotine dependence and number of previous quitting attempts (OR=3.14 [1.75-5.63] for 6+ attempts compared to none). Intention to quit decreased with increasing age (OR=0.48 [0.30-0.75] for [greater than or equal to]65 years compared to <45 years) and increased with nicotine dependence, the number of previous quitting attempts (OR=4.35 [2.76-6.83] for 6+ attempts compared to none) and among non-cigarette smokers (OR=0.51 [0.28-0.92]). Motivation to quit was inversely associated with nicotine dependence and positively associated with the number of previous quitting attempts and personal history of lung disease. CONCLUSION: Over two thirds of Swiss smokers want to quit. However, only a small fraction wishes to do so in the short term. Nicotine dependence, previous attempts to quit or previous history of lung disease are independently associated with difficulty and intention to quit.

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Our aim was to critically evaluate the relations among smoking, body weight, body fat distribution, and insulin resistance as reported in the literature. In the short term, nicotine increases energy expenditure and could reduce appetite, which may explain why smokers tend to have lower body weight than do nonsmokers and why smoking cessation is frequently followed by weight gain. In contrast, heavy smokers tend to have greater body weight than do light smokers or nonsmokers, which likely reflects a clustering of risky behaviors (eg, low degree of physical activity, poor diet, and smoking) that is conducive to weight gain. Other factors, such as weight cycling, could also be involved. In addition, smoking increases insulin resistance and is associated with central fat accumulation. As a result, smoking increases the risk of metabolic syndrome and diabetes, and these factors increase risk of cardiovascular disease. In the context of the worldwide obesity epidemic and a high prevalence of smoking, the greater risk of (central) obesity and insulin resistance among smokers is a matter of major concern

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This paper models the decision to quit smoking like an investment decision where the quitter incurs a sunk withdrawal cost today and forgoes their consumer surplus from cigarettes (invests) and hopes to reap an uncertain reward of better health and therefore higher utility in the future (return). We show that a risk-averse mature smoker who expects to benefit from quitting may still rationally choose to delay quitting until they are more confident that quitting is the right decision for them. Such a decision by the smoker is due to the value associated with keeping their option of whether or not to quit open as they learn more about the damage that smoking will have on their future utility. Policies which reduce a smoker’s uncertainty about the damage that smoking with have on their future utility is likely to make them quit earlier.

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The debate on tobacco and fat taxes often treats smoking and eating as independent behaviors. However, the available evidence shows that they are interdependent, which implies that policies against smoking or obesity may have larger scope than expected. To address this issue, we propose a dynamic rational model where eating and smoking are simultaneous choices that jointly affect body weight and addiction to smoking. Focusing on direct and cross-price effects, we compare tobacco taxes and food taxes and we show that a single policy tool can reduce both smoking and body weight. In particular, food taxes can be more effective than tobacco taxes at simultaneously fighting obesity and smoking.

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Tobacco smoking is a major public health issue and a better understanding of tobacco addiction represents an important challenge. Many factors are involved in tobacco addiction, including genetic factors. Taking them into account in smoking cessation programs would allow to better adapt these programs to individual characteristics and improve their rate of success. Given enzymatic induction by tobacco smoke, smoking cessation can nevertheless have important consequences on the metabolism of some drugs, that have to be taken into consideration. Here we present different clinical and genetic aspects of smoking and of smoking cessation. A dose adjustment of drugs influenced by tobacco smoke is proposed when quitting smoking.

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Currently, smoking cessation represents one of the main strategies to reduce the incidence of tobacco-related diseases in the population. Smoking can also influence pharmacotherapy through several pharmacokinetic or pharmacodynamic interactions. Some of the most concerned drugs are those metabolized by the cytochrome P450 (CYP) 1A2 enzyme (e.g. caffeine, theophylline, clozapine, olanzapine, duloxetine), whose activity is induced by the polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons found in tobacco smoke. This can result in a clinically significant decrease in the pharmacological effect of the drugs and the need of higher doses in smokers. Conversely, upon smoking cessation, toxic plasma levels of the drugs can be reached. The main objective of this thesis was to study the interindividual variability in CYP1A2 induction in a large cohort of smokers, by measuring CYP1A2 activity before smoking cessation and one month later in continuously abstinent subjects. For this purpose, a clinical study was conducted, including 194 smokers from the general population who wished to participate in a smoking cessation program and therefore received medical counseling and substitution therapy (nicotine or varenicline). An analytical method for the simultaneous quantification of nicotine, its metabolites and varenicline in plasma was developed and validated using ultra performance liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry. This method was used to confirm abstinence at different time points during the follow-up. Moreover, it was used to determine plasma levels of the smoking cessation drugs, to be used in the study of their pharmacogenetics, which was the secondary objective of this thesis. High interindividual variability in CYP1A2 induction by smoking was observed, ranging from no change to approximately 7 times decreased CYP1A2 activity after smoking cessation. Several clinical and genetic factors were investigated in an attempt to explain this variability. Firstly, a significant influence of CYP1A2*1F and *1D alleles, of contraceptive use and of the number of cigarettes smoked per day on CYP1A2 induced activity was observed, and of CYP1A2*1F and the use of contraceptives on the basal activity. But no influence of these factors was found on CYP1A2 inducibility. Given that known genetic polymorphisms in CYP1A2 gene were shown to explain only poorly the observed variations in activity, additional genetic factors were studied. SNPs in the CYP oxidoreductase (POR) gene were found to influence CYP1A2 basal activity, but not the induction. Finally, a pathway-based approach allowed to identify SNPs in genes coding for nuclear receptors (CAR, RXRa, VDR, PXR) and induction-mediating receptors (AhR), which significantly influenced CYP1A2 inducibility and basal activity (SNPs in the gene coding for CAR and RXRa). As secondary objective of the study, the pharmacogenetics of nicotine and varenicline is being investigated. Therefore, the nicotine metabolite ratio is used in the attempt to better explain nicotine dependence and the failure/success of quitting smoking. A population pharmacokinetic model is being developed for varenicline, integrating clinical and genetic factors (genes coding for its metabolizing enzymes and transporters), with the purpose of trying to predict efficacy and side effects. These findings suggest that the influence of smoking on pharmacotherapy could be better managed by including clinical and possibly in the future genetic factors, in the assessment of the adaptations needed when a person starts or stops smoking.  - L'arrêt du tabac représente une des principales stratégies pour diminuer l'incidence des maladies causées par celui-ci. Le tabagisme peut influencer la thérapie médicamenteuse par des interactions pharmacocinétiques ou pharmacodynamiques. Parmi les médicaments concernés, il y a ceux métabolisés par le cytochrome P450 (CYP) 1A2 (caféine, théophylline, clozapine, olanzapine, duloxétine, etc), dont l'activité enzymatique est induite par les hydrocarbures aromatiques polycycliques présents dans la fumée de cigarette. Ceci peut se traduire par une diminution de l'effet pharmacologique du traitement et la nécessité d'augmenter les doses d'entretien chez les fumeurs. Au contraire, à l'arrêt de la cigarette, les taux plasmatiques des médicaments peuvent devenir toxiques. L'objectif principal de cette thèse était d'étudier la variabilité interindividuelle dans l'induction du CYP1A2 dans une large cohorte de fumeurs, par la mesure de l'activité du CYP1A2 avant l'arrêt de la cigarette, ainsi qu'un mois après chez les sujets abstinents. Pour ce faire, une étude clinique a été conduite, incluant 194 fumeurs de la population générale dans un programme d'arrêt du tabac offrant des consultations spécifiques et un traitement pharmacologique (nicotine ou varénicline). Une méthode analytique pour la quantification simultanée de la nicotine, ses métabolites et la varénicline dans le plasma par chromatographie liquide couplée à la spectrométrie de masse en tandem à été développée et validée. Cette méthode a été utilisée pour confirmer l'abstinence pendant l'étude et déterminer les taux plasmatiques des médicaments, dans le but d'étudier leur pharmacogénétique. Une grande variabilité interindividuelle dans l'induction du CYP1A2 par la fumée a été observée, parfois sans changement et pouvant aller jusqu'à une diminution d'environ 7 fois l'activité du CYP1A2 après l'arrêt de la cigarette. Plusieurs facteurs cliniques et génétiques ont été étudiés pour essayer d'expliquer cette variabilité. Tout d'abord, on a observé une influence significative: des allèles CYP1A2*1F et *1D, des contraceptifs et du nombre de cigarettes fumées par jour sur l'activité induite du CYP1A2, ainsi que l'influence de l'allèle *1F et des contraceptifs sur l'activité basale. Cependant, aucune influence de ces facteurs n'a été démontrée sur l'inductibilité du CYP1A2. Étant donné que les polymorphismes génétiques du CYP1A2 apportent peu de renseignements sur la variabilité de son activité, des facteurs génétiques supplémentaires ont été étudiés. Des polymorphismes dans le gène POR (CYP oxidoreductase) ont été associés à l'activité basale du CYP1A2, mais pas à l'induction. Finalement, une approche basée sur la voie de signalisation du CYP1A2 a permis d'identifier des polymorphismes dans des gènes codant pour des récepteurs nucléaires (CAR, RXRa, VDR, PXR) et d'autres liés à l'induction (AhR) qui influencent significativement l'inductibilité et l'activité basale (les SNPs du CAR et RXRa). L'objectif secondaire de cette étude était d'investiguer la pharmacogénétique de la nicotine et de la varénicline. Le ratio métabolique de la nicotine est utilisé pour mieux expliquer la dépendance à la nicotine et le succès/échec de l'arrêt de la cigarette. Un modèle pharmacocinétique de population est en cours de développement pour la varénicline, intégrant des facteurs cliniques et génétiques (gènes codant pour ses enzymes de métabolisme et transporteurs), pour tenter de prédire son efficacité et ses effets secondaires. Les résultats de cette thèse suggèrent que l'influence du tabagisme sur la pharmacothérapie serait mieux gérée par l'inclusion des facteurs cliniques et peut-être, dans le futur, génétiques, dans l'évaluation des adaptations nécessaires lorsqu'une personne fume ou arrête de fumer.  - l'arrêt du tabac représente une des principales stratégies pour diminuer l'incidence des maladies causées par celui-ci dans la population. Le tabagisme peut influencer les traitements médicamenteux, soit en modifiant leur élimination par l'organisme, soit en agissant sur leur mode d'action. Parmi les médicaments les plus concernés, on retrouve par exemple: la caféine, la théophylline, la clozapine, l'olanzapine, la duloxétine, dont l'élimination est accélérée par la fumée de cigarette (induction enzymatique). Ceci peut se traduire par une diminution de l'effet du traitement et la nécessité d'en augmenter les doses chez les fumeurs. Au contraire, à l'arrêt de la cigarette, on observe un ralentissement de la fonction enzymatique, qui a pour conséquence une augmentation du taux de médicament dans le sang, pouvant devenir toxique. L'objectif principal de cette thèse était d'étudier comment cette induction par le tabac varie dans une population de fumeurs, par la mesure de l'activité de l'enzyme avant l'arrêt de la cigarette, ainsi qu'un mois après chez les sujets abstinents. Pour ce faire, une étude clinique a été conduite, incluant 194 fumeurs de la population générale dans un programme d'arrêt du tabac offrant des consultations spécifiques et un traitement médicamenteux (nicotine ou varénicline). Une méthode analytique a été mise au point pour mesurer la quantité de nicotine, de ses produits de dégradation et de la varénicline dans le sang des participants à l'étude. De plus, cette méthode a été utilisée pour confirmer l'abstinence pendant l'étude. Une grande variabilité interindividuelle a été observée dans l'induction de l'enzyme par la fumée; il en résulte aucun changement d'activité chez certains sujets après l'arrêt de la cigarette, alors que pour d'autres elle peut être diminuée jusqu'à 7 fois. Plusieurs facteurs cliniques et génétiques ont été étudiés pour essayer d'expliquer cette variabilité. Premièrement, une influence sur l'activité de l'enzyme a été observée pour les contraceptifs hormonaux et le nombre de cigarettes fumées par jour, ainsi que pour certaines variations génétiques dans le gène codant pour l'enzyme d'intérêt, mais il η y a pas eu d'influence sur l'induction. Par la suite, des variations génétiques dans d'autres gènes influençant le fonctionnement de l'enzyme ont été associées soit avec son activité, soit avec son induction par le tabac. Finalement, l'étude propose également d'investiguer si le métabolisme de la nicotine a une influence sur la dépendance, les symptômes de sevrage et le succès/échec de l'arrêt de la cigarette. Des variations génétiques dans les gènes du métabolisme de la varénicline sont également étudiées en lien avec les quantités de varénicline mesurées dans le sang ainsi que les effets du médicament. Ceci permettra peut-être de prédire son efficacité et ses effets secondaires. Les résultats de cette thèse suggèrent que l'influence du tabagisme sur la thérapie médicamenteuse serait mieux gérée en tenant compte des facteurs cliniques et peut-être, dans le futur, de la génétique dans l'adaptation des traitements, que la personne soit fumeuse ou en phase d'arrêt.