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Tobacco

Centre for Addiction and Mental Health · FDA-approved active Small molecule Under review Quality 13/100

Tobacco is a Nitrate Vasodilator [EPC] Small molecule drug developed by Centre for Addiction and Mental Health. It is currently FDA-approved for Relief of occasional eye overexertion.

Tobacco is a common name for several plants in the genus Nicotiana, primarily referring to the cured leaves of Nicotiana tabacum. It is a small molecule with the synonyms NSC-26256, PHENANTHRENE, and RAVATITE.

At a glance

Generic nameTobacco
SponsorCentre for Addiction and Mental Health
Drug classNitrate Vasodilator [EPC]
ModalitySmall molecule
Therapeutic areaOther
PhaseFDA-approved

Approved indications

Common side effects

No common side effects on file.

Key clinical trials

Primary sources

Every claim on this page is sourced from regulatory or scientific primary sources. See our editorial policy for full methodology.

SourceUsed for
ClinicalTrials.govTrial enrolment, design, endpoints, results

Competitive intelligence

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Frequently asked questions about Tobacco

What is Tobacco?

Tobacco is a Nitrate Vasodilator [EPC] drug developed by Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, indicated for Relief of occasional eye overexertion.

What is Tobacco used for?

Tobacco is indicated for Relief of occasional eye overexertion.

Who makes Tobacco?

Tobacco is developed and marketed by Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (see full Centre for Addiction and Mental Health pipeline at /company/centre-for-addiction-and-mental-health).

What drug class is Tobacco in?

Tobacco belongs to the Nitrate Vasodilator [EPC] class. See all Nitrate Vasodilator [EPC] drugs at /class/nitrate-vasodilator-epc.

What development phase is Tobacco in?

Tobacco is FDA-approved (marketed).

Related

Primary sources · FDA · ClinicalTrials.gov · EMA · SEC EDGAR · ChEMBL · Wikidata · full sourcing