학술논문

Can E-Cigarettes and Pharmaceutical Aids Increase Smoking Cessation and Reduce Cigarette Consumption? Findings From a Nationally Representative Cohort of American Smokers
Document Type
article
Source
American Journal of Epidemiology. 187(11)
Subject
Public Health
Health Sciences
Tobacco Smoke and Health
Cancer
Prevention
Substance Misuse
Tobacco
Respiratory
Good Health and Well Being
Adolescent
Adult
Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems
Female
Humans
Male
Propensity Score
Racial Groups
Smoking Cessation
Smoking Cessation Agents
Socioeconomic Factors
Tobacco Use Cessation Devices
Treatment Outcome
United States
Young Adult
cessation
electronic nicotine delivery systems
ENDS
pharmaceutical aids
propensity score matching
Mathematical Sciences
Medical and Health Sciences
Epidemiology
Language
Abstract
Many smokers believe that electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) and pharmaceutical cessation aids can help them quit smoking or reduce cigarette consumption, but the evidence for e-cigarettes to aid quitting is limited. Examining 3,093 quit attempters in the nationally representative US Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) Study, using data from 2013-2015, we evaluated the influence of ENDS and pharmaceutical cessation aids on persistent abstinence (≥30 days) from cigarettes and reduced cigarette consumption, using propensity score matching to balance comparison groups on potential confounders and multiple imputation to handle missing data. At PATH Wave 2, 25.2% of quit attempters reported using ENDS to quit during the previous year, making it the most popular cessation aid in 2014-2015. More quit attempters were persistently cigarette abstinent than were persistently tobacco abstinent (15.5% (standard error, 0.8) vs. 9.6% (standard error, 0.6)). Using ENDS to quit cigarettes increased the probability of persistent cigarette abstinence at Wave 2 (risk difference (RD) = 6%, 95% confidence interval (CI): 2, 10), but using approved pharmaceutical aids did not (for varenicline, RD = 2%, 95% CI: -6, 13; for bupropion, RD = 4%, 95% CI: -6, 17; for nicotine replacement therapy, RD = -3%, 95% CI: -8, 2). Among quit attempters who relapsed, ENDS did not reduce the average daily cigarette consumption (cigarettes per day, -0.18, 95% CI: -1.87, 1.51).