Li Danyi, Wu Shiyou, Sussman Steve, Pentz Mary Ann
Department of Population and Public Health Sciences, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, 90032, USA.
School of Social Work, Arizona State University, Phoenix, AZ, 85004-0689, USA.
Lancet Reg Health Am. 2025 Aug 8;50:101208. doi: 10.1016/j.lana.2025.101208. eCollection 2025 Oct.
Raising the sales age to 21 is among the most important steps to curb tobacco/nicotine use in youth in the past two decades. The study aims to systematically review and perform meta-analyses on the impact of Tobacco 21 (T21) policies on tobacco use among 11-to-20-year-olds in the United States, encompassing T21s at local, state, and national levels.
We screened 14 databases following PRISMA and PICOS criteria, applying standardized abstraction forms and quality assessment tools. Inverse-variance-weighted random-effects models estimated pooled, fully adjusted odds ratios (ORs) for tobacco use outcomes, with moderation analyses by T21-level, gender, age, and race/ethnicity proportions. Sensitivity analyses considering study quality and study-level clusters were conducted.
Among 24 studies included, T21s were associated with current cigarette (OR = 0.92, 95% CI: 0.77-1.11), chewing tobacco (OR = 0.89, 95% CI: 0.65-1.23), e-cigarette (OR = 1.32, 95% CI: 0.88-1.97), and cigar/cigarillo use (OR = 0.98, 95% CI: 0.55-1.73) compared to non-T21 areas and pre-T21 periods. Moderation analyses showed that studies on the Federal T21 and studies with fewer female participants (<50%) had significantly lower odds of cigarette use; No significant moderation effects by race/ethnicity or age-group.
Almost all meta-analyses had null findings, suggesting null policy effects on reducing the prevalence of youth tobacco use. There is evidence that the policy level and gender proportion in studies moderated T21 effects. Future research and practice should consider policy levels, youth age ranges, analytic strategies, and implementation factors such as ID verification and compliance check inspections that may improve T21's effectiveness in reducing youth tobacco use.
No funding.
将烟草销售年龄提高到21岁是过去二十年来遏制青少年烟草/尼古丁使用的最重要举措之一。本研究旨在系统回顾并对烟草21(T21)政策对美国11至20岁青少年烟草使用的影响进行荟萃分析,涵盖地方、州和国家层面的T21政策。
我们按照PRISMA和PICOS标准筛选了14个数据库,应用标准化的摘要表格和质量评估工具。采用逆方差加权随机效应模型估计烟草使用结果的汇总、完全调整比值比(OR),并按T21级别、性别、年龄和种族/族裔比例进行调节分析。进行了考虑研究质量和研究层面聚类的敏感性分析。
在纳入的24项研究中,与非T21地区和T21政策实施前时期相比,T21政策与当前吸烟(OR = 0.92,95%CI:0.77 - 1.11)、嚼烟(OR = 0.89,95%CI:0.65 - 1.23)、电子烟(OR = 1.32,95%CI:0.88 - 1.97)以及雪茄/小雪茄使用(OR = 0.98,95%CI:0.55 - 1.73)相关。调节分析表明,关于联邦T21政策的研究以及女性参与者较少(<50%)的研究中,吸烟的比值比显著较低;种族/族裔或年龄组没有显著的调节作用。
几乎所有的荟萃分析都没有显著结果,表明该政策对降低青少年烟草使用流行率没有效果。有证据表明研究中的政策级别和性别比例调节了T21政策的效果。未来的研究和实践应考虑政策级别、青少年年龄范围、分析策略以及身份验证和合规检查等实施因素,这些因素可能会提高T21政策在减少青少年烟草使用方面的有效性。
无资金支持。