Underly Robert, Dull Gary M, Nudi Evan, Pionk Timothy, Prevette Kristen, Smith Jeffrey
Reynolds American Incorporated Services Company, Winston-Salem, NC, United States.
R Street Institute, Washington DC, DC, United States.
JMIR Form Res. 2023 Oct 30;7:e49876. doi: 10.2196/49876.
Over the last decade, the use of electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDSs) has risen, whereas studies that describe how consumers use these products have been limited. Most studies related to ENDS use have involved study designs focused on use in a central location environment or attempted to measure use outcomes through subjective self-reported end points. The development of accurate and reliable tools to collect data in a naturalistic real-world environment is necessary to capture the complexities of ENDS use. Using connected devices in a real-world setting provides a convenient and objective approach to collecting behavioral outcomes with ENDS.
The Product Use and Behavior instrument was developed and used to capture the use of the Vuse Solo ENDS in an ambulatory setting to best replicate real-world use behavior. This study aims to determine overall mean values for topography outcomes while also providing a definition for an ENDS use session.
A prospective ambulatory clinical study was performed with the Product Use and Behavior instrument. Participants (n=75) were aged between 21 and 60 years, considered in good health, and were required to be established regular users of ENDSs. To better understand use behavior within the population, the sample was sorted into percentiles with bins based on daily puff counts. To frame these data in the relevant context, they were binned into low-, moderate-, and high-use categories (10th to 40th, 40th to 70th, and 70th to 100th percentiles, respectively), with the low-use group representing the nonintense category, the high-use group representing the intense category, and the moderate-use group being reflective of the average consumer.
Participants with higher daily use took substantially more puffs per use session (6.71 vs 4.40) and puffed more frequently (interpuff interval: 32.78 s vs 61.66 s) than participants in the low-use group. Puff duration remained consistent across the low-, moderate‑, and high-use groups (2.10 s, 2.18 s, and 2.19 s, respectively). The moderate-use group had significantly shorter session lengths (P<.001) than the high- and low-use groups, which did not differ significantly from each other (P=.16).
Using connected devices allows for a convenient and robust approach to the collection of behavioral outcomes related to product use in an ambulatory setting. By using the variables captured with these tools, it becomes possible to move away from predefined periods of use to better understand topography outcomes and define use sessions. The data presented here offer a possible method to define these sessions. These data also begin to frame international standards used for the analytical assessments of ENDSs in the correct context and begin to shed light on the differences between standardized testing regimens and actual use behavior.
Clinicaltrials.gov NCT04226404; https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT04226404.
在过去十年中,电子尼古丁传送系统(ENDS)的使用有所增加,而描述消费者如何使用这些产品的研究却很有限。大多数与ENDS使用相关的研究都采用了集中于在中心位置环境下使用的研究设计,或者试图通过主观的自我报告终点来衡量使用结果。开发准确可靠的工具以在自然主义的现实环境中收集数据对于捕捉ENDS使用的复杂性是必要的。在现实环境中使用联网设备为收集ENDS的行为结果提供了一种便捷且客观的方法。
开发并使用产品使用与行为工具来捕捉Vuse Solo ENDS在动态环境中的使用情况,以最佳地复制现实世界中的使用行为。本研究旨在确定地形学结果的总体平均值,同时也为ENDS使用时段提供一个定义。
使用产品使用与行为工具进行了一项前瞻性动态临床研究。参与者(n = 75)年龄在21至60岁之间,被认为健康状况良好,并且必须是已确立的ENDS常规使用者。为了更好地了解人群中的使用行为,根据每日吸数将样本按百分位数分组。为了将这些数据置于相关背景中,将它们分为低、中、高使用类别(分别为第10至40百分位数、第40至70百分位数和第70至100百分位数),低使用组代表非高强度类别,高使用组代表高强度类别,中使用组反映普通消费者。
与低使用组的参与者相比,每日使用量较高的参与者每次使用时段的吸数明显更多(6.71次对4.40次),且抽吸频率更高(抽吸间隔:32.78秒对61.66秒)。低、中、高使用组的抽吸持续时间保持一致(分别为2.10秒、2.18秒和2.19秒)。中使用组的使用时段长度明显短于高使用组和低使用组(P <.001),高使用组和低使用组之间无显著差异(P = 0.16)。
使用联网设备为在动态环境中收集与产品使用相关的行为结果提供了一种便捷且强大的方法。通过使用这些工具捕获的变量,有可能摆脱预定义的使用时段,以更好地理解地形学结果并定义使用时段。此处呈现的数据提供了一种定义这些时段的可能方法。这些数据还开始在正确的背景下构建用于ENDS分析评估的国际标准,并开始揭示标准化测试方案与实际使用行为之间的差异。
Clinicaltrials.gov NCT04226404;https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT04226404