Mecamylamine has been used as an orally-active
ganglionic blocker in treating
autonomic dysreflexia and
hypertension, but, like most ganglionic blockers, it is more often used now as a research tool. Mecamylamine is also sometimes used as an
antiaddictive drug to help people stop smoking tobacco, and is now more widely used for this application than it is for lowering blood pressure. This effect is thought to be due to its blocking
α3β4 nicotinic receptors in the brain. It has also been reported to bring about sustained relief from tics in
Tourette syndrome when a series of more usually used agents had failed. In a recent double-blind, placebo-controlled Phase II trial in Indian patients with major depression, (
S)-mecamylamine (TC-5214) appeared to have efficacy as an
augmentation therapy. This is the first substantive evidence that shows that compounds where the primary pharmacology is antagonism to neuronal nicotinic receptors will have antidepressant properties. TC-5214 is currently in Phase III of clinical development as an add-on treatment and on stage II as a monotherapy treatment for major depression. The first results reported from the Phase III trials showed that TC-5214 failed to meet the primary goal and the trial did not replicate the effects that had been encouraging in the Phase II trial. Development is funded by Targacept and AstraZeneca. It did not produce meaningful, beneficial results on patients as measured by changes on the
Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale after eight weeks of treatment as compared with placebo. ==Overdose==