Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences and Weill Institute for Neurosciences, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA (JCY, MCM, DR, KD, MT-S, DDS), Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital, San Francisco, CA (JCY, MT-S), Hopelab, San Francisco, CA (DR), Division of Research, Kaiser Permanente Northern California Region, Oakland, CA (DDS).
J Addict Med. 2021;15(5):421-424. doi: 10.1097/ADM.0000000000000773.
E-cigarette use is increasing among young adults in the U.S. However, longitudinal research studies examining associations between e-cigarette use and combustible cigarette use among young adults are limited. This study assessed the relationship of e-cigarette use to smoking reduction and cessation among young adults.
This is a secondary analysis of a randomized controlled social media-based smoking cessation trial comprising adults ages 18 to 25 who smoked cigarettes and engaged in heavy episodic drinking (N = 179). Over 12 months, participants reported past month e-cigarette use with nicotine or tetrahydrocannabinol, cigarette quantity in the past week, quit attempts, and cessation strategies including nicotine e-cigarettes. Longitudinal regression models estimated associations between e-cigarette use, smoking reduction, and 7-day abstinence.
Past-month nicotine e-cigarette use prevalence ranged from 53.1% at baseline to 50.3% at 12 months. Over 70% of participants who reported past month nicotine e-cigarette use also smoked cigarettes (ie, dual use). Neither past month nicotine nor tetrahydrocannabinol e-cigarette use was associated with smoking reduction or cessation. However, use of nicotine e-cigarettes as a cessation strategy among participants attempting to quit (N = 137) was positively associated with abstinence (adjusted odds ratio = 2.47, 95% CI = 1.20-5.09) and ≥50% reduction in cigarettes per week from baseline (aOR = 2.36,95% CI = 1.08-5.18), relative to other strategies.
Nicotine e-cigarettes were significantly associated with improved tobacco use outcomes when used as a cessation strategy, but not when used apart from trying to quit smoking. Dual use may not be an effective path to achieve smoking cessation.
在美国,年轻人使用电子烟的现象正在增加。然而,关于电子烟使用与年轻人吸食可燃香烟之间关联的纵向研究有限。本研究评估了电子烟使用与年轻人减少和戒烟的关系。
这是一项基于社交媒体的随机对照戒烟试验的二次分析,该试验纳入了年龄在 18 至 25 岁之间的成年人,他们吸烟且有重度间歇性饮酒行为(N=179)。在 12 个月内,参与者报告过去一个月使用含有尼古丁或四氢大麻酚的电子烟、过去一周的吸烟量、戒烟尝试以及包括尼古丁电子烟在内的戒烟策略。纵向回归模型估计了电子烟使用、减少吸烟量和 7 天戒烟之间的关联。
过去一个月尼古丁电子烟的使用率从基线时的 53.1%到 12 个月时的 50.3%。超过 70%报告过去一个月使用尼古丁电子烟的参与者也吸烟(即双重使用)。过去一个月使用尼古丁或四氢大麻酚电子烟均与减少吸烟量或戒烟无关。然而,在试图戒烟的参与者中(N=137),将尼古丁电子烟作为戒烟策略与戒烟(调整后的优势比=2.47,95%置信区间=1.20-5.09)和与基线相比每周吸烟量减少≥50%(优势比=2.36,95%置信区间=1.08-5.18)显著相关,而其他策略则没有显著相关性。
当作为戒烟策略使用时,尼古丁电子烟与改善烟草使用结果显著相关,但与试图戒烟分开使用时则没有相关性。双重使用可能不是实现戒烟的有效途径。