4.5 Article

Heated tobacco products do not help smokers quit or prevent relapse: a longitudinal study in Japan

Journal

TOBACCO CONTROL
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/tc-2022-057613

Keywords

Cessation; Denormalization; Non-cigarette tobacco products; Surveillance and monitoring

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This study investigated the relationship between the use of heated tobacco products (HTPs) and smoking cessation and relapse, and found that HTPs did not help smokers quit or prevent former smokers from relapsing.
BackgroundHeated tobacco products (HTPs) are often marketed as a safer alternative to help cigarette smokers quit. We investigated the link between HTP use and smoking cessation and relapse. Methods7044 adults (>= 20 years old) with at least two observations over three waves (2019-2021) of a longitudinal, nationwide, internet-based survey were classified into current (past 30-day), former and never cigarette smokers. >= 1 month and >= 6 months smoking cessation and smoking relapse at 1-year follow-up were assessed in relation to current HTP use at baseline. Generalised estimating equation models were weighted to account for population differences between HTP users and non-users. Adjusted prevalence ratios (APRs) were computed within population subgroups. ResultsAt baseline, 17.2%, 9.1% and 6.1% of the respondents were current cigarette smokers, HTP users and dual users, respectively. Among current established smokers (having smoked regularly, n=1910), HTP use was significantly associated with a decreased likelihood of >= 1 month cessation within those who reported having used evidence-based cessation measures (APR=0.61), smoking 20+ cigarettes per day (APR=0.62), high school education or less (APR=0.73) and fair/poor health (APR=0.59). Negative associations were also seen for >= 6 months cessation among those aged 20-29 years (APR=0.56) and full-time workers (APR=0.56). Among former smokers (n=2906), HTP use was associated with smoking relapse within those who last smoked >1 year ago (APR=1.54), among women (APR=1.61), those aged 20-29 years (APR=2.09), those reporting high school education or less (APR=2.36), those who were unemployed/retired (AOR=3.31) and never/non-current alcohol users (APR=2.10). ConclusionHTP use did not help smokers quit or prevent former smokers from relapsing. HTPs should not be recommended as a cessation aid.

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