Center for the Study of Drugs, Alcohol, Smoking, and Health, School of Nursing, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, United States; Rogel Cancer Center, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, United States.
Applied Biostatistics Laboratory, School of Nursing, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, United States.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2024 Oct 1;263:111402. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2024.111402. Epub 2024 Jul 26.
Research examining prospective links of e-cigarette use with cigarette, marijuana, and other substance use has been limited largely to 1-2-year follow-up periods and focused on younger adolescents. This study examined longitudinal associations of e-cigarette use with cigarette, marijuana, and other substance use initiation among U.S. adolescents and young adults (AYAs) across an eight-year period.
Adolescent (ages 12-17) and young adult (ages 18-25) data from waves 1-6 of the nationally representative Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health study (2013-2021) were used. Discrete time survival models with time-varying weights were employed to examine the risk of cigarette, marijuana, and other drug use initiation over an eight-year follow-up period among AYAs with no lifetime use of e-cigarettes/other tobacco, lifetime but no past 30-day use of e-cigarettes/other tobacco, past 30-day e-cigarettes only, other tobacco use only, or past 30-day e-cigarette/other tobacco use. We compare our time-varying weighting approach to a traditional time-invariant/complete case weighting approach.
Across six follow-up waves, all three past 30-day nicotine/tobacco use groups, including e-cigarettes only, had greater risk for cigarette, marijuana, and other drug use initiation relative to those not using nicotine/tobacco. The three past 30-day nicotine/tobacco use groups did not differ from each other in risk for marijuana use initiation. Associations were smaller in magnitude for young adults compared to adolescents, but significant for both age groups.
Substance use initiation risks persist beyond 1-2 years for U.S. AYAs using e-cigarettes. Prevention strategies to reduce AYA e-cigarette use are needed to reduce cancer-related risk.
研究电子烟使用与香烟、大麻和其他物质使用之间的前瞻性关联,主要限于 1-2 年的随访期,并侧重于年轻的青少年。本研究考察了电子烟使用与美国青少年和年轻成年人(AYAs)在八年期间香烟、大麻和其他物质使用起始的纵向关联。
使用全国代表性的烟草和健康状况评估研究(2013-2021 年)的第 1-6 波青少年(12-17 岁)和年轻成人(18-25 岁)数据。使用随时间变化的权重离散时间生存模型,考察在八年的随访期间,在没有终生使用电子烟/其他烟草、终生但过去 30 天没有使用电子烟/其他烟草、过去 30 天只有电子烟、仅使用其他烟草或过去 30 天电子烟/其他烟草使用的 AYAs 中,香烟、大麻和其他药物使用起始的风险。我们将我们的时变加权方法与传统的时不变/完整案例加权方法进行了比较。
在六个随访波中,包括电子烟在内的所有三个过去 30 天尼古丁/烟草使用组,与不使用尼古丁/烟草的人相比,吸烟、大麻和其他药物使用的风险更高。过去 30 天使用尼古丁/烟草的三组在大麻使用起始风险方面没有差异。与青少年相比,年轻成年人的关联程度较小,但对两个年龄组都有显著影响。
对于使用电子烟的美国 AYAs,物质使用起始风险持续超过 1-2 年。需要预防策略来减少 AYA 电子烟使用,以降低与癌症相关的风险。