Association of e-cigarette use with smoking cessation among smokers who plan to quit after a hospitalization: A prospective study

Mené auprès de 1 357 fumeurs adultes souhaitant arrêter de fumer et ayant reçu des conseils pour arrêter le tabagisme au cours d'une hospitalisation, cet essai analyse l'utilisation auto-rapportée de la cigarette électronique un et trois mois après l'hospitalisation puis évalue, du point de vue du taux d'abstinence tabagique à 6 mois, l'intérêt de ce produit

Background : Many smokers report using e-cigarettes to help them quit smoking, but whether e-cigarettes aid cessation efforts is uncertain. Objective : To determine whether e-cigarette use after hospital discharge is associated with subsequent tobacco abstinence among smokers who plan to quit and are advised to use evidence-based treatment. Design : Secondary data analysis of a randomized controlled trial. (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01714323 [parent trial]) Setting : 3 hospitals. Participants : 1 357 hospitalized adult cigarette smokers who planned to stop smoking, received tobacco cessation counseling in the hospital, and were randomly assigned at discharge to a tobacco treatment recommendation (control) or free tobacco treatment (intervention). Measurements : Self-reported e-cigarette use (exposure) was assessed 1 and 3 months after discharge; biochemically validated tobacco abstinence (outcome) was assessed 6 months after discharge. Results : Twenty-eight percent of participants used an e-cigarette within 3 months after discharge. In an analysis of 237 propensity score–matched pairs, e-cigarette users were less likely than nonusers to abstain from tobacco use at 6 months (10.1% vs. 26.6%; risk difference, −16.5% [95% CI, −23.3% to −9.6%]). The association between e-cigarette use and quitting varied between intervention patients, who were given easy access to conventional treatment (7.7% vs. 29.8%; risk difference, −22.1% [CI, −32.3% to −11.9%]), and control patients, who received only treatment recommendations (12.0% vs. 24.1%; risk difference, −12.0% [CI, −21.2% to 2.9%]) (P for interaction = 0.143). Limitations : Patients self-selected e-cigarette use. Unmeasured confounding is possible in an observational study. Conclusion : During 3 months after hospital discharge, more than a quarter of smokers attempting to quit used e-cigarettes, mostly to aid cessation, but few used them regularly. This pattern of use was associated with less tobacco abstinence at 6 months than among smokers who did not use e-cigarettes. Additional study is needed to determine whether regular use of e-cigarettes aids or hinders smoking cessation. Primary Funding Source : National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute.

Annals of Internal Medicine 2018

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