Jorenby Douglas E, Smith Stevens S, Fiore Michael C, Baker Timothy B
Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Center for Tobacco Research and Intervention, 1930 Monroe St., Suite 200, Madison, WI 53711, United States.
Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Center for Tobacco Research and Intervention, 1930 Monroe St., Suite 200, Madison, WI 53711, United States.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2017 Jan 1;170:93-101. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2016.10.041. Epub 2016 Nov 9.
To evaluate how experienced dual users used cigarettes and e-cigarettes in real-world use and under different levels of cigarette availability.
Dual users (cigarettes+e-cigarettes; n=74) and a smoke-only group (just cigarettes; n=74) engaged in a 26-day study with two ad lib use intervals, a week of 75% cigarette reduction and three days of 100% cigarette reduction. After a week of ad lib use of products, all participants were asked to reduce smoking by 75% (dual users were free to use their e-cigarettes as they wished), followed by another week of ad lib use. All participants were then asked to reduce smoking by 100% (cessation) for three days. Primary outcomes were biological samples (carbon monoxide, urinary nicotine and cotinine). Participants also provided real-time reports of product use, craving, and withdrawal symptoms using a smartphone app.
Dual users did not smoke fewer cigarettes than smoke-only participants during ad lib periods, but quadrupled their use of e-cigarettes during smoking reduction periods. Dual users were significantly more likely to maintain 100% reduction (97.1% vs. 81.2%). Amongst women, dual use was associated with higher nicotine levels and withdrawal suppression.
Among a group of experienced dual users, e-cigarettes helped maintain smoking reduction and reduced some withdrawal symptoms, although both withdrawal symptoms and nicotine levels varied as a function of gender.
评估有经验的双重使用者在现实使用中以及在不同香烟可得水平下如何使用香烟和电子烟。
双重使用者(香烟+电子烟;n=74)和仅吸烟组(仅吸香烟;n=74)参与了一项为期26天的研究,该研究有两个自由使用阶段、一周75%的香烟减量期和三天100%的香烟减量期。在对产品进行一周的自由使用后,要求所有参与者将吸烟量减少75%(双重使用者可按自己意愿自由使用电子烟),随后是另一周的自由使用。然后要求所有参与者将吸烟量减少100%(戒烟)三天。主要结果是生物样本(一氧化碳、尿尼古丁和可替宁)。参与者还使用智能手机应用程序提供产品使用、渴望和戒断症状的实时报告。
在自由使用期间,双重使用者吸的香烟并不比仅吸烟参与者少,但在吸烟减量期,他们使用电子烟的量增加了四倍。双重使用者更有可能维持100%的减量(97.1%对81.2%)。在女性中,双重使用与更高的尼古丁水平和戒断抑制有关。
在一组有经验的双重使用者中,电子烟有助于维持吸烟减量并减轻一些戒断症状,尽管戒断症状和尼古丁水平都因性别而异。