DeGrandpre R J, Bickel W K, Hughes J R, Higgins S T
Department of Psychiatry, University of Vermont, Burlington 05401.
Psychopharmacology (Berl). 1992;108(1-2):1-10. doi: 10.1007/BF02245277.
The maintenance of a characteristic level of nicotine in a smoker's body is referred to as nicotine regulation. Considerable research has examined this question of whether smokers regulate nicotine intake. This is because nicotine regulation raises the question of whether smokers who, to decrease their intake of tar, switch to low tar/low nicotine cigarettes will increase the number and/or intensity of cigarettes smoked. Although the results of studies examining nicotine regulation are reported as generally consistent, considerable variability exists across these analyses such that the health hazards of smoking low tar/nicotine cigarettes remains uncertain. In the present analysis, these studies were analyzed to ascertain whether a behavioral-economic interpretation could better quantify the effects of changing nicotine yield on individuals' nicotine and smoke consumption. Specifically, 17 nicotine-regulation studies were reanalyzed using a unit-price analysis (i.e., cost-benefit analysis). The reanalysis showed less variability across regulation studies than previously reported; a positively-decelerating demand curve was found across most studies, consistent with previous unit-price analyses of food- and drug-maintained behavior. The benefits of this reanalysis versus the traditional regulation interpretation are that the behavioral economics approach: 1) brings unity to a variable set of data, 2) shows a nonlinear relationship, previously considered to be linear, between nicotine consumption and nicotine yield, 3) shows that nicotine yields higher, and not lower, than the smoker's usual brand decrease smoke consumption and thus decreases consumption of the harmful agents in tobacco, 4) better quantifies the data and provides a more parsimonious interpretation that generalizes to other drugs and food-maintained behavior in humans and nonhumans and, 5) integrates behavioral and pharmacological factors that control the consumption of reinforcers. These results suggest the value of behavioral economics in the study of consumptive behaviors and clinically suggest, in agreement with the studies contained herein, that decreasing the smoker's usual nicotine yield can have potential health risks for smokers who are unable to stop smoking.
吸烟者体内尼古丁维持在特定水平的现象被称为尼古丁调节。大量研究探讨了吸烟者是否会调节尼古丁摄入量这一问题。这是因为尼古丁调节引发了一个问题,即那些为减少焦油摄入量而改吸低焦油/低尼古丁香烟的吸烟者,是否会增加吸烟的数量和/或强度。尽管关于尼古丁调节的研究结果总体上被报告为一致,但这些分析存在相当大的差异,以至于吸低焦油/尼古丁香烟的健康危害仍不确定。在本分析中,对这些研究进行了分析,以确定行为经济学解释是否能更好地量化尼古丁产量变化对个体尼古丁和烟雾消费的影响。具体而言,使用单价分析(即成本效益分析)对17项尼古丁调节研究进行了重新分析。重新分析显示,调节研究中的变异性比之前报道的要小;大多数研究发现了一条正减速需求曲线,这与之前对食物和药物维持行为的单价分析一致。与传统调节解释相比,这种重新分析的好处在于行为经济学方法:1)使一组可变数据具有统一性,2)显示了尼古丁消费与尼古丁产量之间先前被认为是线性的非线性关系,3)表明尼古丁产量高于而非低于吸烟者常用品牌时会减少烟雾消费,从而减少烟草中有害物质的消费,4)能更好地量化数据并提供更简洁的解释,且该解释可推广到人类和非人类的其他药物及食物维持行为,5)整合了控制强化物消费的行为和药理学因素。这些结果表明了行为经济学在消费行为研究中的价值,并且在临床上表明,与本文中的研究一致,对于无法戒烟的吸烟者而言,降低其常用的尼古丁产量可能存在潜在健康风险。