Department of Preventive Medicine, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California; and
Department of Preventive Medicine, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California; and.
Pediatrics. 2020 May;145(5). doi: 10.1542/peds.2019-1652. Epub 2020 Apr 6.
There is a dearth of evidence regarding the association of use of electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes) with certain product characteristics and adolescent and young adult risk of unhealthy tobacco use patterns (eg, frequency of combustible cigarette smoking), which is needed to inform the regulation of e-cigarettes.
Data were collected via an online survey of participants in the Southern California Children's Health Study from 2015 to 2016 (baseline) and 2016 to 2017 (follow-up) ( = 1312). We evaluated the association of binary categories of 3 nonmutually exclusive characteristics of the e-cigarette used most frequently with the number of cigarettes smoked in the past 30 days at 1-year follow-up. Product characteristics included device (vape pen and/or modifiable electronic cigarette [mod]), use of nicotine in electronic liquid (e-liquid; yes or no), and use for dripping (directly dripping e-liquid onto the device; yes or no).
Relative to never e-cigarette users, past-30-day e-cigarette use was associated with greater frequency of past-30-day cigarette smoking at follow-up. Among baseline past-30-day e-cigarette users, participants who used mods (versus vape pens) smoked >6 times as many cigarettes at follow-up (mean: 20.8 vs 1.3 cigarettes; rate ratio = 6.33; 95% confidence interval: 1.64-24.5) after adjustment for sociodemographic characteristics, baseline frequency of cigarette smoking, and number of days of e-cigarette use. After adjustment for device, neither nicotine e-liquid nor dripping were associated with frequency of cigarette smoking.
Baseline mod users (versus vape pen users) smoked more cigarettes in the past 30 days at follow-up. Regulation of e-cigarette device type warrants consideration as a strategy to reduce cigarette smoking among adolescents and young adults who vape.
电子烟的使用与某些产品特性以及青少年和年轻成年人不健康的烟草使用模式(例如,可燃香烟吸烟的频率)之间的关联证据不足,这对于电子烟的监管至关重要。
数据来自 2015 年至 2016 年(基线)和 2016 年至 2017 年(随访)期间参加南加州儿童健康研究的参与者的在线调查(n=1312)。我们评估了最常使用的电子烟的 3 个非互斥特征的二进制类别与随访期间过去 30 天内吸烟数量的关联。产品特征包括设备(电子烟笔和/或可调节电子烟[mod])、电子液体中是否含有尼古丁(是或否)以及是否用于滴注(直接将电子液体滴入设备中)。
与从不使用电子烟者相比,过去 30 天使用电子烟与随访期间吸烟频率增加有关。在基线过去 30 天使用电子烟的参与者中,与使用电子烟笔的参与者相比,使用 mod 的参与者在随访期间吸烟的频率更高(平均:20.8 支比 1.3 支;比率比=6.33;95%置信区间:1.64-24.5),校正社会人口统计学特征、基线吸烟频率和电子烟使用天数后。在调整设备因素后,尼古丁电子液体和滴注均与吸烟频率无关。
基线 mod 用户(与电子烟笔用户相比)在随访期间过去 30 天内吸烟更多。作为减少青少年和年轻成年人吸电子烟的策略,应考虑对电子烟设备类型进行监管。