INTREPID Lab, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Nicotine Tob Res. 2024 Jun 21;26(7):888-894. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntae006.
Trial evidence suggests that e-cigarettes may aid in quitting smoking, while observational studies have found conflicting results. However, many observational studies have not adjusted for important differences between e-cigarette users and non-users.
We aimed to determine the association between e-cigarette use frequency and motivation to use e-cigarettes to quit smoking, and smoking cessation using data from Canada's largest smoking cessation program. Participants who completed a baseline assessment and 6-month follow-up questionnaire were divided post hoc into four groups based on their self-reported e-cigarette use during the 30 days before baseline: (1) non-users; (2) users of e-cigarettes not containing nicotine; (3) occasional users; and (4) frequent users. Occasional and frequent users were further divided into two groups based on whether they reported using e-cigarettes to quit smoking. Abstinence at 6-month follow-up (7-day point prevalence abstinence) was compared among groups.
Adjusted quit probabilities were significantly higher (both p < .001) for frequent baseline e-cigarette users (31.6%; 95% CI = 29.3%, 33.8%) than for non-users (25.8%; 25.3% and 26.3%) or occasional users (24.2%; 22.5% and 26.0%). Unadjusted proportions favored non-users over occasional users (p < .001), but this was not significant after adjustment (p = .06). People using e-cigarettes to quit smoking were not likelier than other users to be successful, but were likelier to report frequent e-cigarette use during follow-up.
Frequent baseline e-cigarette use predicted successful smoking cessation, compared to occasional and non-users. Use of e-cigarettes to quit did not predict smoking cessation but was associated with continued use during follow-up, perhaps due in part to planned transitions to e-cigarettes.
Prior observational studies investigating e-cigarette use for smoking cessation have found that occasional users have poorer outcomes than either frequent or non-users. Consistent with these studies, occasional users in our data also had poorer outcomes. However, after adjustment for variables associated with cessation success, we found that cessation probabilities did not differ between occasional and non-users. These findings are consistent with trial data showing the benefit of e-cigarette use among people trying to quit smoking. Results of this study suggest that differences between trials and previous observational studies may be because of unaddressed confounding in the latter.
试验证据表明,电子烟可能有助于戒烟,而观察性研究则得出了相互矛盾的结果。然而,许多观察性研究并没有调整电子烟使用者和非使用者之间的重要差异。
我们旨在使用加拿大最大的戒烟计划的数据,确定电子烟使用频率与使用电子烟戒烟的动机之间的关联,并确定电子烟使用与戒烟成功率之间的关联。完成基线评估和 6 个月随访问卷的参与者根据他们在基线前 30 天内报告的电子烟使用情况,事后被分为四组:(1)非使用者;(2)不含尼古丁的电子烟使用者;(3)偶尔使用者;(4)频繁使用者。偶尔和频繁使用者根据他们是否报告使用电子烟戒烟,进一步分为两组。在 6 个月随访时(7 天点流行率戒烟)比较各组的戒烟率。
频繁使用电子烟的基线使用者(31.6%;95%置信区间 29.3%,33.8%)的戒烟率明显高于非使用者(25.8%;25.3%和 26.3%)或偶尔使用者(24.2%;22.5%和 26.0%)(均 p<0.001)。未经调整的比例有利于非使用者而非偶尔使用者(p<0.001),但调整后无显著差异(p=0.06)。与其他使用者相比,报告使用电子烟戒烟的使用者不太可能成功,但更有可能在随访期间报告频繁使用电子烟。
与偶尔使用者和非使用者相比,基线时频繁使用电子烟预测戒烟成功。使用电子烟戒烟并不能预测戒烟成功,但与随访期间的持续使用相关,这可能部分归因于向电子烟的计划过渡。
先前研究电子烟戒烟的观察性研究发现,偶尔使用者的戒烟结果不如频繁使用者或非使用者。与这些研究一致,我们的数据中偶尔使用者的结果也较差。然而,在调整与戒烟成功相关的变量后,我们发现偶尔使用者和非使用者之间的戒烟率没有差异。这些发现与试验数据一致,表明电子烟的使用对试图戒烟的人有益。这项研究的结果表明,试验和先前观察性研究之间的差异可能是由于后者未解决的混杂因素所致。