4.4 Article

Adolescent depression symptoms and e-cigarette progression

Journal

DRUG AND ALCOHOL DEPENDENCE
Volume 228, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2021.109072

Keywords

Adolescent; E-cigarette; Depression; Longitudinal studies

Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute [RO1 CA202262]

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The study found that greater depressive symptoms at age 14 were associated with a faster rate of adolescent e-cigarette progression, while there was no significant relationship between e-cigarette use and the development of depressive symptoms over time.
Background: Depression symptoms are associated with the initiation of cigarette smoking and progression to regular use. Whether similar relationships exist between depression symptoms and adolescent e-cigarette progression has not been firmly established. Methods: This prospective longitudinal survey study measured the relationship between depression symptoms and e-cigarette use among 1822 adolescents from four public high schools outside of Philadelphia, PA. Adolescents completed in-classroom surveys at wave 1 (fall 2016, 9th grade) and 6-month intervals for the following 36 months (fall 2019, 12th grade). E-cigarette use, depression symptoms, and potential covariates were measured at each wave. A latent growth curve model was used to assess the longitudinal relationship between ecigarette use and depression symptoms. Results: Baseline depressive symptoms had a significant effect on e-cigarette use trend (b = 0.01, z = 4.29, p < 0.0001) while holding other variables constant. A standard deviation increase in depressive symptoms at baseline was associated with a 0.25 standard deviation increase in the rate of e-cigarette progression across the following 36 months. By contrast, the path from baseline e-cigarette use to depressive symptoms trend was not significant (p = 0.74). Conclusions: The present study provides new evidence for the effects of depression symptoms on adolescent ecigarette progression. Greater depressive symptoms at age 14 years old were associated with a faster rate of ecigarette escalation. However, e-cigarette use was not related to the development of depression symptoms over time. It will be important to examine whether adolescents with elevated depression symptoms respond similarly to e-cigarette prevention campaigns as adolescents in general.

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