Department of Population and Public Health Sciences, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA; Institute for Addiction Science, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA.
Boston University, Wheelock College of Education and Human Development, Boston, MA.
J Pediatr. 2024 Dec;275:114246. doi: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2024.114246. Epub 2024 Aug 21.
To test whether the association between flavor at first vape and continued use is mediated through subjective experience at first vape.
In a 2020 cross-sectional survey, 955 young adult ever-vapers recalled their first flavor vaped, subjective experiences at first use, current vaping behavior, nicotine dependence, and quit attempts. A latent class model grouped first-use subjective experiences into classes. Two-part negative binomial hurdle models for each vaping behavior evaluated whether the association of first flavor used with vaping outcomes was mediated by positive experience.
Four latent classes (positive, positive and negative, negative, and minimal experience) were further reduced to "any positive experience" (only positive, positive and negative) vs "no positive experience" (negative or minimal). Class membership mediated the association of first flavor used (mint/menthol/ice [ie, "cooling"] or sweet vs other) with each vaping outcome. For example, cooling flavor (vs. other) was associated with positive class membership (OR = 3.5; 95% CI: 1.5, 8.1), which was then associated with any past 30-day vaping (OR = 3.9; 95% CI: 2.7, 5.8) and greater number of vaping days among current vapers (RR = 1.9; 95% CI: 1.3, 2.7) in the two-part hurdle model. Similar results were observed for nicotine dependence and quit attempts, and for sweet (vs other) flavor for any dependence or quit attempts, but not number of dependence symptoms or quit attempts.
Use of a cooling or sweet flavor at first use was associated with having a positive first vaping sensory experience, and then greater likelihood as a young adult of reporting past 30-day vaping, more vaping days, and greater risk for nicotine dependence, suggesting a key mediating role of first use experience.
检验首次吸食的口味与持续使用之间的关联是否通过首次吸食时的主观体验来介导。
在 2020 年的一项横断面调查中,955 名年轻成年电子烟使用者回忆了他们首次吸食的口味、首次使用时的主观体验、当前的电子烟使用行为、尼古丁依赖程度和戒烟尝试。一个潜在类别模型将首次使用时的主观体验分为不同类别。二部分负二项式门槛模型用于评估首次使用的口味与电子烟使用结果之间的关联是否通过积极体验来介导。
四个潜在类别(积极、积极和消极、消极和最小体验)进一步简化为“任何积极体验”(仅积极和积极及消极)与“没有积极体验”(消极或最小)。类别成员资格中介了首次使用的口味(薄荷/薄荷醇/冰[即“清凉”]或甜与每种电子烟使用结果之间的关联。例如,清凉口味(vs. 其他口味)与积极类别成员资格相关(OR=3.5;95%CI:1.5, 8.1),然后与任何过去 30 天的电子烟使用(OR=3.9;95%CI:2.7, 5.8)和当前电子烟使用者中更多的电子烟使用天数相关(RR=1.9;95%CI:1.3, 2.7)在二部分门槛模型中。在尼古丁依赖程度和戒烟尝试方面也观察到了类似的结果,在使用清凉或甜口味方面也观察到了任何依赖程度或戒烟尝试的结果,但在依赖症状或戒烟尝试的数量方面没有观察到结果。
首次吸食清凉或甜口味与首次吸食电子烟时产生积极的感官体验相关,而作为年轻人,更有可能报告过去 30 天吸食电子烟、吸食电子烟的天数更多、尼古丁依赖的风险更高,这表明首次使用体验起着关键的中介作用。