Smoking cessation
Peer reviewed by Dr Toni HazellLast updated by Dr Hayley Willacy, FRCGPLast updated 30 Nov 2022
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Professional Reference articles are designed for health professionals to use. They are written by UK doctors and based on research evidence, UK and European Guidelines. You may find the Smoking article more useful, or one of our other health articles.
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How common is smoking? (Epidemiology)1
There are an estimated 6.9 million smokers in the UK. This represents 14.1% of the population aged over 18 years and this percentage has fallen in recent years from nearly 20% in 2011. The greatest decline in smoking over this period has been among 18- to 24-year-olds.
It is the biggest cause of premature death and preventable disease in the UK - more than the next six causes put together. Between 2016-2018, ONS records show 77,600 people died per year from an illness attributable to smoking in the UK; about half of all smokers will eventually die of a smoking-related illness.
Certain demographic groups are found more frequently among smokers; men more than women, people from routine or manual occupations; regional differences (Blackpool and Kingston upon Hull have the largest proportions of smokers in the UK).2
Risks associated with smoking
Smoking is implicated as a risk factor for many health problems, including:3
Premature death: cigarette smoking is the single most important cause of premature death in the UK. Most premature deaths caused by smoking are due to lung cancer, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and coronary heart disease.
Cancers of the upper respiratory tract, oesophagus, bladder, kidney, stomach, and pancreas; myeloid leukaemia.
Cerebrovascular disease, aortic aneurysm, and heart failure caused by coronary heart disease.
Peptic ulceration (gastric and duodenal).
Angina, peripheral arterial disease (including Buerger's disease), macular degeneration, impotence, infertility, skin wrinkling, osteoporosis.
Increased severity of asthma, respiratory tract infections and diabetic retinopathy.
Passive smoking: exposure to environmental tobacco smoke causes an increased risk of smoking-related diseases, especially lung cancer and heart disease.
Children exposed to environmental tobacco smoke are at increased risk of sudden infant death syndrome, asthma, otitis media and chest infections in the first years of life.
Fetal exposure to maternal smoking increases the risk of miscarriage, premature birth, low birth weight and stillbirth. Smoking in pregnancy may also affect the child's physical growth and academic attainment may be reduced.
A 2018 UK paper showed that smoking just one cigarette a day resulted in a much higher risk of developing coronary heart disease and stroke than expected.4 The research found that men who smoked one cigarette per day had 46% of the excess risk of heart disease and 41% of the excess risk of stroke associated with smoking 20 cigarettes per day (much higher than the expected 5%). For women, those who smoked one cigarette per day had 31% of the excess risk of heart disease and 34% of the excess risk of stroke associated with smoking 20 cigarettes per day.
Smoking cessation interventions are a cost-effective way of reducing ill health. Quitting at any age provides both immediate and long-term health benefits.5
Smoking cessation options (treatment and management)6
Smokers should be advised to stop and be offered help and follow-up, with access to a smoking cessation clinic for behavioural support. The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) recommends focusing particularly on reducing the prevalence of smoking among people in manual groups, ethnic groups and disadvantaged communities. A reminder about the health benefits of smoking cessation and brief advice should be given at every opportunity in primary and secondary care. If appropriate, a referral should be made to the local NHS Stop Smoking Service.
Opportunities identified by NICE for discussing smoking cessation include patients referred for elective surgery and those recently discharged from hospital.
NICE recommendations are as follows:6
Offer nicotine replacement therapy (NRT), varenicline or bupropion, as appropriate, to people who are planning to stop smoking.
Pharmacological therapy should normally be prescribed as part of an abstinent-contingent treatment, in which the smoker makes a commitment to stop smoking on or before a particular date (target stop date).
The prescription of NRT, varenicline or bupropion should be sufficient to last only until two weeks after the target stop date. Normally, this will be after two weeks of NRT therapy and 3-4 weeks for varenicline and bupropion, to allow for the different methods of administration and mode of action.
Subsequent prescriptions should be given only to people who have demonstrated, on re-assessment, that their quit attempt is continuing.
If a smoker's attempt to quit is unsuccessful using NRT, varenicline or bupropion, do not offer a repeat prescription within six months unless special circumstances have hampered the person's initial attempt.
Varenicline or bupropion may be offered to people with unstable cardiovascular disorders, subject to clinical judgement.
Consider offering a combination of nicotine patches and another form of NRT (such as gum, inhalator, lozenge or nasal spray) to people who show a high level of dependence on nicotine or who have found single forms of NRT inadequate in the past.
Do not offer NRT, bupropion or varenicline in any combination.
Do not favour one medication over another. The clinician and patient should choose the one that seems most likely to succeed.
When deciding which therapies to use and in which order, discuss the options with the patient and take the following into account:
Whether a first offer of referral to the NHS Stop Smoking Service has been made.
Contra-indications and the potential for adverse effects.
The patient's personal preferences.
The availability of appropriate counselling or support.
The likelihood that the patient will follow the course of treatment.
Their previous experience of smoking cessation aids.
Harm reduction
If the person is not yet able to commit to stopping smoking, discuss the benefits of a harm reduction approach. This aims to reduce the overall exposure to tobacco by reducing consumption. This can be facilitated with, or without, nicotine replacement therapy (NRT). Offer follow-up for support and to increase the opportunities to stop smoking completely.
Current advice recommends using NRT in preference to e-cigarettes. There is evidence that e-cigarettes are superior for those trying to stop smoking7 8 and are approximately 95% safer than tobacco9 , but they are an unlicensed product and variation in efficacy exists among different brands as well as a lack of information on their long-term safety.
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Nicotine replacement therapy
Seven NRT formulations are available on prescription and most can also be bought over the counter (OTC) at pharmacies and supermarkets. None of these formulations is more effective than any other and all increase the rate of quitting by 50-60% above control groups (using willpower or placebo).10 There is evidence that higher-dose gum and combination treatments are more effective.11
Available methods of NRT include:3
Patches.
Gum.
Nasal spray.
Mouth spray.
Inhalation cartridge.
Lozenges.
Sublingual tablets.
NRT is most effective with behavioural interventions. NRT reduces but does not completely eliminate the symptoms of withdrawal because it takes a few seconds for nicotine from a cigarette to reach the brain, one minute for the mouth spray, several minutes for the nasal spray, gum, inhalator, sublingual tablet and lozenge and hours for transdermal patches.
NRT can control the weight gain commonly experienced after cessation. NRT should be continued for eight weeks and can then be stopped immediately.
The risk of dependence on NRT is small. About 5% who quit continue to use nicotine regularly. Nicotine from NRT is considerably safer than cigarettes, as the patient is not exposed to tar, carbon monoxide and other harmful products. However, the safety of the long-term use of NRT is currently being investigated.
NICE advises explaining the risks and benefits of using NRT to young people aged from 12 to 17, pregnant or breastfeeding women and people who have unstable cardiovascular disorders. These groups should also be strongly encouraged to use behavioural support in their quit attempt. NRT is licensed for use in children from the age of 12. Nicotinell® lozenges have the added rider that they should only be prescribed for children under the age of 18 on the recommendations of a doctor.
Smokers should be advised not to smoke while using NRT products, although some gums are licensed for smoking reduction (see 'Chewing gum', below).
Contra-indications12
Severe cardiovascular disease (severe arrhythmias, post-infarction period); recent cerebrovascular accident (including transient ischaemic attacks).
Cautions
Cardiovascular disease; peripheral vascular disease; hyperthyroidism, diabetes mellitus, phaeochromocytoma, renal impairment, hepatic impairment, gastritis and peptic ulcers.
Side-effects
Nausea.
Dizziness.
Flu-like symptoms.
Palpitations.
Dyspepsia.
Hiccups.
Insomnia.
Vivid dreams.
Myalgia.
Patches - these are applied on waking, to dry, non-hairy skin and removed, usually when retiring to bed; the next patch should be sited on a different area. Nicorette® is a 16-hour patch, whereas Nicotinell® and NiQuitin® are 24-hour patches. As a general guide, people who smoke more than 10 cigarettes a day should apply a high-strength patch daily for 6-8 weeks, the medium-strength patch for two weeks and then the low-strength patch for the final two weeks. Lower-dose regimes are more appropriate for those who smoke 10 a day or fewer. Each brand has its own regime so the manufacturer's instructions should be followed in individual cases. The most common side-effect is skin irritation. Minor sleep disturbances can occur, in which case 16-hour patches are best.
Chewing gum (can be used when trying to reduce the number of cigarettes) - sugar-free, nicotine 2 mg and 4 mg. Available in fruit, liquorice and mint flavours (Nicotinell®). Chew slowly for 30 minutes, when the urge to smoke occurs. Maximum 60 mg daily. Withdraw gradually after three months. Individuals smoking more than 20 cigarettes daily may need the 4 mg strength.
Nasal spray - nicotine 500 micrograms/spray. One spray into each nostril to maximum twice an hour for 16 hours daily (maximum 64 sprays daily) for eight weeks; then reduce gradually over the next four weeks (reduce by half at the end of the first two weeks; stop altogether at the end of the next two weeks). Maximum treatment three months.
Oral spray - this is an oral alternative which can be used whenever the urge to smoke appears. The maximum is two sprays per episode (up to four sprays every hour), 64 sprays daily.
Nicorette® inhalator - this is now available as a 15 mg cartridge. It should be inhaled when the urge to smoke occurs. Up to 12 cartridges can be used daily for eight weeks; then they should be reduced by half over the next two weeks and then tailed off over two weeks. The 15 mg cartridge is replacing the 10 mg cartridge and lasts twice as long (40 minutes).
Inhalators - are used like normal cigarettes and they deliver 1 mg of nicotine in 80 puffs. A 15 mg cartridge will last 40 minutes of intense use (perhaps eight five-minute sessions). They may be particularly useful for people who have been unsuccessful with other methods.8
Lozenges - one lozenge every 1-2 hours, when the urge to smoke occurs. Maximum 30 mg daily. Withdraw gradually after three months. The period of treatment should not usually exceed six months (eg, four hours for three weeks, then every eight hours for three weeks).
Sublingual tablets (2 mg) - one each hour (two may be needed for those on more than 20 cigarettes daily). Maximum 80 mg daily. Continue for three months, then gradually reduce. Treatment should not exceed six months.
Bupropion13
Bupropion (Zyban®) is only available on prescription. Bupropion was developed as an antidepressant but subsequently shown in trials to be effective in smoking cessation. Bupropion is an atypical antidepressant similar to diethylpropion, an appetite suppressant; it inhibits reuptake of dopamine, noradrenaline (norepinephrine) and serotonin in the CNS and is a non-competitive nicotine receptor antagonist.
Contra-indications12
The Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA)/Committee on Safety of Medicines (CSM) issued a warning that bupropion should not be prescribed to patients with seizures or eating disorders, a CNS tumour, or who are experiencing acute symptoms of alcohol or benzodiazepine withdrawal. Bupropion should not be prescribed to patients with other risk factors for seizures unless the potential benefit of smoking cessation clearly outweighs the risk. The risk of seizures is increased by antidepressants, mefloquine, chloroquine, antipsychotics, quinolones, sedating antihistamines, corticosteroids, theophylline and tramadol, alcohol abuse, history of head trauma, diabetes and use of stimulants and anorectics.
Bupropion is contra-indicated in pregnancy or whilst breastfeeding. It is also contra-indicated in patients with a history of bipolar illness. It should not be given to patients under the age of 18. NB: allow 14 days after stopping a monoamine-oxidase inhibitor (MAOI).
Cautions
Hepatic cirrhosis, renal impairment; predisposition to seizures; raised blood pressure (monitor weekly if used with nicotine products). It may impair performance of skilled tasks (eg, driving).
Side-effects
The most important side-effects are seizures (fits), which occur in about 1 in 1,000 patients. Insomnia and dry mouth commonly occur. About 0.1% of smokers suffer severe hypersensitivity reactions (eg, angio-oedema, bronchospasm and anaphylactic shock) and 3% suffer milder reactions, such as rash, urticaria or pruritus.
Rare side-effects include gastrointestinal disturbances, tremor, anorexia, headache, dizziness, visual disturbance, anxiety, flushing, hallucinations, depersonalisation, seizures, paraesthesia, Stevens-Johnson syndrome, hepatitis and exacerbation of psoriasis.
See the British National Formulary (BNF) for full prescribing details.12
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Varenicline14
Varenicline (Champix®) is only available on prescription. It is an alpha-4 beta-2 (α4β2) nicotinic acetylcholine receptor partial agonist. This means that it both blocks and stimulates the receptor to which it is attracted. The α4β2 receptor is located in the nucleus accumbens area of the brain (the 'pleasure centre'). The stimulatory effect produces a weak nicotine-like effect which reduces the craving for nicotine itself, whilst the blocking effect inhibits the pleasurable effect derived from smoking.
Varenicline should be started 1-2 weeks before the target stop date. NICE recommends that it should normally only be prescribed as part of a programme of behavioural support.6 The drug should be initiated at 500 micrograms (one tablet) daily for three days, 500 micrograms twice-daily for four days, then 1 mg twice-daily for 11 weeks. If the patient cannot tolerate the higher dose, it can be reduced to 500 micrograms twice-daily. A further 12-week course of 1 mg twice-daily can be considered for patients who have stopped smoking but feel they still need further pharmacological support.
NB: As of June 2021 Varenicline became unavailable in the UK.15
Contra-indications
Pregnancy.
Age under 18.
Cautions12
History of psychiatric illness - there is an MHRA/CSM warning advising that suicidal thoughts and behaviour have been observed. Patients should be advised to cease therapy or seek medical advice if they develop depression or suicidal thoughts. Patients with a history of psychiatric illness should be closely monitored.
Severe renal impairment.
Breastfeeding.
Up to 3% of individuals in the trials complained of irritability, an urge to smoke, depression and/or insomnia on stopping the drug. Patients should be advised of this and a gradual reduction in dosage towards the end of the course may need to be considered.
Side-effects
The most common side-effect noted in trials was nausea, which occurred in 30% of patients. This usually resolved spontaneously in a few days in patients who continued the drug. It is also helped by taking the tablet with water but a reduction in dosage to 500 micrograms twice-daily was sometimes required. A wide range of other adverse effects was reported, of which the most common were insomnia, abnormal dreams, headaches and flatulence. Both nausea and abnormal dreams can be reduced by taking the second pill at dinner time or supper time rather than at bedtime.
See the BNF for full prescribing details.12
Other treatments for smoking cessation
The following treatments may have some effect on smoking cessation but are neither licensed in the UK for this indication, nor recommended by NICE:
Acupuncture, acupressure, laser therapy, hypnotherapy and electrostimulation - these have not been shown to be effective in clinical trials, although further research is needed.16 17
Further reading and references
- Cahill K, Stevens S, Perera R, et al; Pharmacological interventions for smoking cessation: an overview and network meta-analysis. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2013 May 31;(5):CD009329. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD009329.pub2.
- Adult smoking habits in the UK; Office for National Statistics, Statistical Bulletin, 2020
- Smoking statistics; Action on Smoking and Health (ASH), May 2021
- Smoking cessation; NICE CKS, August 2022 (UK access only)
- Hackshaw A, Morris JK, Boniface S, et al; Low cigarette consumption and risk of coronary heart disease and stroke: meta-analysis of 141 cohort studies in 55 study reports. BMJ. 2018 Jan 24;360:j5855.
- Taghizadeh N, Vonk JM, Boezen HM; Lifetime Smoking History and Cause-Specific Mortality in a Cohort Study with 43 Years of Follow-Up. PLoS One. 2016 Apr 7;11(4):e0153310. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0153310. eCollection 2016.
- Tobacco: preventing uptake, promoting quitting and treating dependence; NICE guideline (2021 - last updated January 2023)
- Hajek P, Phillips-Waller A, Przulj D, et al; A Randomized Trial of E-Cigarettes versus Nicotine-Replacement Therapy. N Engl J Med. 2019 Feb 14;380(7):629-637. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa1808779. Epub 2019 Jan 30.
- Hartmann-Boyce J, McRobbie H, Butler AR, et al; Electronic cigarettes for smoking cessation. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2021 Sep 14;9:CD010216. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD010216.pub6.
- E-cigarettes: an evidence update; Public Health England, August 2015
- Hartmann-Boyce J, Chepkin SC, Ye W, et al; Nicotine replacement therapy versus control for smoking cessation. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2018 May 31;5:CD000146. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD000146.pub5.
- Lindson N, Chepkin SC, Ye W, et al; Different doses, durations and modes of delivery of nicotine replacement therapy for smoking cessation. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2019 Apr 18;4:CD013308. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD013308.
- British National Formulary (BNF); NICE Evidence Services (UK access only)
- Yan T, Goldman RD; Bupropion for smoking cessation in adolescents. Can Fam Physician. 2021 Oct;67(10):743-745. doi: 10.46747/cfp.6710743.
- Jordan CJ, Xi ZX; Discovery and development of varenicline for smoking cessation. Expert Opin Drug Discov. 2018 Jul;13(7):671-683. doi: 10.1080/17460441.2018.1458090. Epub 2018 Mar 28.
- Champix: NHS Central Alerting System; Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency
- White AR, Rampes H, Liu JP, et al; Acupuncture and related interventions for smoking cessation. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2014 Jan 23;1:CD000009. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD000009.pub4.
- Barnes J, McRobbie H, Dong CY, et al; Hypnotherapy for smoking cessation. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2019 Jun 14;6:CD001008. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD001008.pub3.
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Article history
The information on this page is written and peer reviewed by qualified clinicians.
Next review due: 5 Oct 2027
30 Nov 2022 | Latest version
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