학술논문

Use of Electronic Cigarettes to Aid Long-Term Smoking Cessation in the United States: Prospective Evidence From the PATH Cohort Study
Document Type
article
Source
American Journal of Epidemiology. 189(12)
Subject
Public Health
Health Sciences
Substance Misuse
Tobacco
Clinical Research
Prevention
Drug Abuse (NIDA only)
Cancer
Tobacco Smoke and Health
Prevention of disease and conditions
and promotion of well-being
3.1 Primary prevention interventions to modify behaviours or promote wellbeing
Respiratory
Cardiovascular
Good Health and Well Being
Adolescent
Adult
Cohort Studies
Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems
Female
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Propensity Score
Smoking Cessation
United States
Young Adult
e-cigarettes
long-term effectiveness
matching
nationally representative cohort
nicotine abstinence
propensity-score methods
smoking cessation
Mathematical Sciences
Medical and Health Sciences
Epidemiology
Language
Abstract
Electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes) are the preferred smoking-cessation aid in the United States; however, there is little evidence regarding long-term effectiveness among those who use them. We used the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health Study to compare long-term abstinence between matched US smokers who tried to quit with and without use of e-cigarettes as a cessation aid. We identified a nationally representative cohort of 2,535 adult US smokers in 2014-2015 (baseline assessment), who, in 2015-2016 (exposure assessment), reported a past-year attempt to quit and the cessation aids used, and reported smoking status in 2016-2017 (outcome assessment; self-reported ≥12 months continuous abstinence). We used propensity-score methods to match each e-cigarette user with similar nonusers. Among US smokers who used e-cigarettes to help quit, 12.9% (95% confidence interval (CI): 9.1%, 16.7%) successfully attained long-term abstinence. However, there was no difference compared with matched non-e-cigarette users (cigarette abstinence difference: 2%; 95% CI: -3%, 7%). Furthermore, fewer e-cigarette users were abstinent from nicotine products in the long term (nicotine abstinence difference: -4%; 95% CI: -7%, -1%); approximately two-thirds of e-cigarette users who successfully quit smoking continued to use e-cigarettes. These results suggest e-cigarettes may not be an effective cessation aid for adult smokers and, instead, may contribute to continuing nicotine dependence.