E-cigarettes, promoted as a way to quit
regular cigarettes, may actually be a new route to conventional smoking
and nicotine addiction for teenagers, according to a new UC San
Francisco study.
In the first analysis of the relationship
between e-cigarette use and smoking among adolescents in the United
States, UCSF researchers found that adolescents who used the devices
were more likely to smoke cigarettes and less likely to quit smoking.
The study of nearly 40,000 youth around the country also found that
e-cigarette use among middle and high school students doubled between
2011 and 2012, from 3.1 per cent to 6.5 per cent.
“Despite claims that e-cigarettes are
helping people quit smoking, we found that e-cigarettes were associated
with more, not less, cigarette smoking among adolescents,” said lead
author Lauren Dutra, a postdoctoral fellow at the UCSF Center for
Tobacco Control Research and Education.
“E-cigarettes are likely to be gateway
devices for nicotine addiction among youth, opening up a whole new
market for tobacco,” she said.
The study will be published online on March 6 in JAMA Pediatrics.
E-cigarettes are battery-powered devices
that look like cigarettes and deliver an aerosol of nicotine and other
chemicals. Promoted as safer alternatives to cigarettes and smoking
cessation aids, the devices are rapidly gaining popularity among adults
and youth in the U.S. and around the world. Unregulated by the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration, e-cigarettes have been widely promoted by
their manufacturers as a way for people to quit smoking conventional
cigarettes. They are sold in flavors such as chocolate and strawberry
that are banned in conventional cigarettes because of their appeal to
youth.
In the new UCSF study, the researchers
examined survey data from middle and high school students who completed
the National Youth Tobacco Survey in 2011 and 2012.
The authors found that the devices were
associated with higher odds of progression from experimenting with
cigarettes to becoming established cigarette smokers. Additionally,
adolescents who smoked both conventional cigarettes and e-cigarettes
smoked more cigarettes per day than non-e-cigarette users.
Contrary to advertiser claims that
e-cigarettes can help consumers stop smoking conventional cigarettes,
teenagers who used e-cigarettes and conventional cigarettes were much
less likely to have abstained from cigarettes in the past 30 days, 6
months, or year. At the same time, they were more likely to be planning
to quit smoking in the next year than smokers who did not use
e-cigarettes.
The study’s cross-sectional nature didn’t
allow the researchers to identify whether most youths initiated with
conventional cigarettes or e-cigarettes. But the authors noted that
about 20 per cent of middle school students and about 7 per cent of high
school students who had ever used e-cigarettes had never smoked regular
cigarettes — meaning that some kids are introduced to the addictive
drug nicotine through e-cigarettes, the authors said.
“It looks to me like the wild west
marketing of e-cigarettes is not only encouraging youth to smoke them,
but also it is promoting regular cigarette smoking among youth,” said
senior author Stanton A. Glantz, PhD, UCSF professor of medicine and
director of the Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education.
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