| Literature DB >> 26239277 |
Gitte Borup1, Kim Lyngby Mikkelsen2, Philip Tønnesen3, Lona Louring Christrup4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Long-term use of nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) has been approved in several countries for smokers who are unable or unwilling to quit smoking. However, information on basic characteristics, degree of nicotine dependence, health status and contentment with long-term use of NRT is scarce. The aim of this study was to collect information on the characteristics of long-term NRT users, having used NRT for at least 12 months, reasons for, and contentment with, their continued use of NRT including reasons for wishing to quit or sustain use and an estimation of their degree of nicotine dependence.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26239277 PMCID: PMC4522965 DOI: 10.1186/1477-7517-12-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Harm Reduct J ISSN: 1477-7517
Basic characteristics, smoking history and current NRT use
| Total of respondents ( | |
|---|---|
| Men (%, | 45.7 (42) |
| Mean age (SD, range) | 52.0 (10.6, 33–75) |
| Mean duration of NRT use in years (SD, range) | 5.5 (4.5, 1–27) |
| Mean current NRT useab (SD, range) | 15.0 (9.4, 3–60) |
| Mean former smoking years (SD, range) | 27.4 (11.5, 5–53) |
| Mean recalled smokingc (SD, range) | 19.5 (8. 38, 5–60) |
| Wish to quit NRT (%, | 88.0 (81) |
| Felt addicted to NRT (%, | 77.2 (71) |
aIncluding respondents using only acute single-dose NRT.
bExpressed as NRT pieces/day.
cExpressed as cig/day.
Classification of dependence according to the Heaviness of Smoking Index (HSI score)
| A = 3 points (0–5 min) | B = 2 points (6–30 min) | C = 1 point (31–60 min) | D = 0 points (later) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A = 0 points (≤10) | 4 | 8 | 6b | 8b |
| B = 1 point (11–20) | 15 | 10 | 9 | 3b |
| C = 2 points (21–30) | 4a | 5 | - | - |
| D = 3 points (31 ≤) | 2a | 1a | - | - |
The classification of dependence includes respondents using only acute-acting single-dose NRT. Patch, e-cigarette and inhaler users were omitted (n = 75). The time intervals in the columns indicate time to first NRT after waking. The intervals given in the rows indicate number of NRT doses per day.
aHighly nicotine dependent respondents (score 5–6) = 9.3% (N = 7).
bRespondents found low dependent on nicotine (score 0–1) = 22.7% (N = 17). Respondents moderately dependent on nicotine (score 2–4) = 68.0% (N = 51).
Time to first NRT compared to mean current NRT use and recalled smoking
| Time to first NRT | % of respondents (N) | Mean NRT pieces/day (SD) | Mean recalled cig/day (SD) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0-5 min | 33.3 (25) | 19.1 (11.6) | 22.2 (10.8) |
| 6-30 min | 32.0 (24) | 16.1 (9.0) | 20.4 (5.2) |
| 31-60 min | 20.0 (15) | 11.2 (3.2) | 17.4 (5.4) |
| Later | 16.0 (11) | 8.8 (5.5) | 13.1 (5.1) |
Includes respondents using only acute-acting single-dose NRT (n = 75). Respondents using patch, e-cigarette and inhaler were omitted. For every category of delayed NRT use after waking, the average number of NRT pieces/day was reduced to 3.6 (95% CI −5.53 to −1.70) showing a highly significant association between TTFN and NRT use.
Figure 1Equivalence ratio between current NRT use and recalled smoking. The regression line is based on a fractional polynomial regression and includes respondents using acute-acting single-dose NRT (N = 75). One outlier with high recalled cig/day and low NRT pieces/day was omitted (delta-beta = −8.1 SD). Logistic regression up to and including 25 cig/day showed a significant equivalence ratio of 0.86. No significance was found for those with recalled smoking of more than 25 cig/day.