E-cigarettes might be more effective for smoking cessation than nicotine replacement therapy, results of a randomized study of almost 900 adults suggest.
Rates of abstinence at 1 year were 18% for adults who used refillable e-cigarettes to wean themselves off smoking, according to the reported results, compared with about 10% for those who tried nicotine replacement therapies.
“This is particularly noteworthy given that nicotine replacement was used under expert guidance, with access to the full range of nicotine replacement products, and with 88.1% of participants using combination treatments,” said investigator Peter Hajek, PhD, of Queen Mary University of London, and his coauthors in the New England Journal of Medicine.
The findings contrast with those of earlier studies, which showed a lesser effect of e-cigarettes as a stop-smoking strategy, Dr. Hajek and coauthors wrote.
In previous studies, participants used first-generation cartridge-based e-cigarettes, while in the present study, they were given second-generation refillable e-cigarettes and free choice of e-liquids, the authors noted. Moreover, those previous studies provided limited face-to-face support, they said, but
The randomized study by Dr. Hajek and his colleagues included 886 adults in the United Kingdom attending stop-smoking services provided by the U.K. National Health Service. They were randomized to receive either an e-cigarette starter pack and one bottle of nicotine-containing e-liquid, or 3 months’ worth of nicotine replacement products of their own choosing. At the 52-week validation visits, the study participants received about the equivalence of about $26 U.S. dollars for their travel and time.
Abstinence from smoking at 52 weeks, which was verified by measuring expired carbon monoxide levels, was achieved in 18.0% of the e-cigarette group and 9.9% of the nicotine replacement group (relative risk, 1.83; 95% confidence interval, 1.30-2.58; P less than .001), according to the report.
However, the rate of continued e-cigarette use was “fairly high,” investigators wrote. Eighty percent of the e-cigarette group was still using their assigned product at 52 weeks, compared with just 9% in the nicotine replacement group.
“This can be seen as problematic if e-cigarette use for a year signals long-term use, which may pose as-yet-unknown health risks,” they said.
Tobacco withdrawal symptoms were less severe and satisfaction ratings were higher with e-cigarettes versus nicotine replacement therapy, similar to what had been observed in previous studies, investigators said.
They cited several limitations. For example, product assignments were not blinded. However, the investigators said they tried to “limit expectation effects by recruiting only participants with no strong product preference.”
Dr. Hajek reported grants and fees from Pfizer unrelated to the present study. Coauthors reported disclosures related to Pfizer and Johnson and Johnson, along with grants from the U.K. National Institute for Health Research.
SOURCE: Hajek P et al. N Engl J Med. 2019;380:629-37. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa1808779.