• Preventive medicine · Dec 2022

    Meta Analysis

    Longer-term use of electronic cigarettes when provided as a stop smoking aid: Systematic review with meta-analyses.

    • Ailsa R Butler, Nicola Lindson, Thomas R Fanshawe, Annika Theodoulou, Rachna Begh, Peter Hajek, Hayden McRobbie, Chris Bullen, Caitlin Notley, Nancy A Rigotti, and Jamie Hartmann-Boyce.
    • Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK. Electronic address: ailsa.butler@phc.ox.ac.uk.
    • Prev Med. 2022 Dec 1; 165 (Pt B): 107182107182.

    AbstractModerate certainty evidence supports use of nicotine electronic cigarettes to quit smoking combustible cigarettes. However, there is less certainty regarding how long people continue to use e-cigarettes after smoking cessation attempts. We set out to synthesise data on the proportion of people still using e-cigarettes or other study products at 6 months or longer in studies of e-cigarettes for smoking cessation. We updated Cochrane searches (November 2021). For the first time, we meta-analysed prevalence of continued e-cigarette use among individuals allocated to e-cigarette conditions, and among those individuals who had successfully quit smoking. We updated meta-analyses comparing proportions continuing product use among individuals allocated to use nicotine e-cigarettes and other treatments. We included 19 studies (n = 7787). The pooled prevalence of continued e-cigarette use at 6 months or longer was 54% (95% CI: 46% to 61%, I2 86%, N = 1482) in participants assigned to e-cigarette conditions. Of participants who had quit combustible cigarettes overall 70% were still using e-cigarettes at six months or longer (95% CI: 53% to 82%, I2 73%, N = 215). Heterogeneity in direction of effect precluded meta-analysis comparing long-term use of nicotine e-cigarettes with NRT. More people were using nicotine e-cigarettes at longest follow-up compared to non-nicotine e-cigarettes, but CIs included no difference (risk ratio 1.15, 95% CI: 0.94 to 1.41, n = 601). The levels of continued e-cigarette use observed may reflect the success of e-cigarettes as a quitting tool. Further research is needed to establish drivers of variation in and implications of continued use of e-cigarettes.Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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