Independent Pharmaceutica, a private company based at Stockholm's Karolinska Institute and founded in 1997 by Professor Torgny Svensson, joins a growing line-up of biotech companies seeking to develop an anti-nicotine shot.
Its researchers say the vaccine eliminates the quick high smokers relish by creating antibodies that bind to nicotine molecules, making them too bulky to enter the brain.
Once the high is gone, the argument goes, so is the main cause of addiction.
In the phase II study on 400 people in three Nordic countries, researchers will measure the effect of the vaccine on those who have quit smoking and want to avoid relapse.
But they may use it in future to help active smokers quit, according to Independent Pharmaceutica.
Positive results so far
Switzerland's Cytos Biotechnology published results from a phase II trial in 2005, showing 42 percent of patients who achieved high antibody levels at vaccination stayed smoke-free after 12 months, against 21 percent in the group given a placebo.
Bermuda-based private equity firm Celtic Pharma has said it will announce results from its phase II trial on a nicotine vaccine this quarter, while US company Nabi Pharmaceuticals is developing a similar product.
According to the World Health Organization, tobacco use is the number one preventable cause of death in the world, killing 5.4 million people every year, an increasing proportion of those in low-income countries. – (Sven Norsdenstam/Reuters Health)
Read more:
Vaccine vs. smoking
Anti-smoking vaccine promising
April 2008