| Literature DB >> 33619197 |
Catherine M Pound1,2,3, Jennifer Zhe Zhang3, Ama Tweneboa Kodua3, Margaret Sampson4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Despite the aggressive marketing of electronic nicotine device systems (ENDS) as smoking cessation tools, the evidence of their effectiveness is mixed. We conducted a systematic review of randomised controlled trials to determine the effect of ENDS on cigarette smoking cessation, as compared with other types of nicotine replacement therapies (NRT).Entities:
Keywords: internal medicine; primary care; public health; respiratory medicine (see thoracic medicine); substance misuse
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33619197 PMCID: PMC7903126 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-044222
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Characteristics of included studies
| Characteristics of RCTs measuring smoking cessation at 6 months or later | |||||||
| Author and year of publication | Design | Country | No of participants | Main eligibility criteria | Intervention | Comparator | Main outcome of interest |
| Bullen, 2013 | 3 group, parallel, single centre | Australia | 657 total, 584 included in this review (2 of 3 groups) | First-generation e-cigarette × 12 weeks | Nicotine patch x 12 weeks | Continuous abstinence 6 months after quit day | |
| Hajek 2019 | 2 group, parallel, multicentre | UK | 884 | Adults with no strong preference towards e-cigarette or NRT | Any type of e-cigarette | Any nicotine-replacement therapy | Continuous abstinence 52 weeks after quit day |
| Lee, 2019 | 2 group, parallel, single centre | Republic of Korea | 150 | e-cigarette × 24 weeks | Nicotine gum × 24 weeks | Continuous abstinence 24 weeks after quit day | |
| Lee, 2019 | 2 group, parallel, single centre | USA | 30 | Adults, smoked | e-cigarette × 6 weeks | Nicotine patch × 5 weeks, then placebo patch × 1 week | 7-day point prevalence abstinence at 6 months |
| Hatsukami, 2019 | 4 group, parallel, multicentre | USA | 264 total, 152 included in this review (2 of 4 groups) | e-cigarettes | Nicotine gum or nicotine lozenge | 7-day point prevalence abstinence at 8 months | |
| Eisenhofer, 2015 | 2-group, parallel, single centre | USA | 11 | Veterans who met criteria for tobacco disorder | e-cigarettes × 3 weeks | Nicotine patch × 3 weeks | Reduction in no of cigarettes smoked per day at 3 weeks |
NRT, nicotine replacement therapies; RCT, randomised controlled trial.
Summary of findings table
| Nicotine-containing Electronic cigarettes (ENDS) vs Nicotine Replacement Therapies (NRT) for smoking cessation | ||||
| Population: current smokers at enrolment into trials | ||||
| Intervention: Nicotine-containing e-cigarettes | ||||
| Comparison: Nicotine-replacement therapies | ||||
| Outcomes | Relative effect | No of participants (studies) | Quality of the evidence (GRADE) | Comments |
| RR 1.42 (0.97 to 2.09) | 1800 (5 studies) | ⊕⊕OO*† | ||
| RR 1.25 (0.79 to 1.98) | 1460 (4 studies) | ⊕⊕OO*† | ||
| RR 0.96 (0.76 to 1.20) | 758 (4 studies) | ⊕OOO*†‡ | No severe AEs related to investigated products were reported | |
| Summary data not available | 4 studies | ⊕OOO*†‡ | Withdrawal measures included Minnesota Nicotine Withdrawal Scale, QSU scores, frequency of urge and strength of urge score and prespecified symptoms of depressed mood, irritability, restlessness and hunger | |
| Summary data not available | 4 studies | ⊕OOO*†‡ | Acceptance defined as wanting to recommend product to friends, helpfulness, taste, satisfaction, psychological reward, enjoyment of sensation, aversion, and ability to reduce craving depending on study | |
GRADE Working Group grades of evidence.
High quality: Further research is very unlikely to change our confidence in the estimate of effect.
Moderate quality: Further research is likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and may change the estimate.
Low quality: Further research is very likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and is likely to change the estimate.
Very low quality: We are very uncertain about the estimate.
*Downgraded one level because of risk of bias.
†Downgraded one level because of heterogeneity.
‡Downgraded one level because of imprecision of results.
GRADE, Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation; MD, mean difference; QSU, Questionnaire on Smoking Urges; RR, rate ratio.
Figure 1Study flow diagram.
Figure 2Risk of bias for each outcome.
Figure 3Pooled results per outcome. ENDS, electronic nicotine device systems; NRT, nicotine replacement therapies.
Figure 4Sensitivity and subgroup analyses. ENDS, electronic nicotine device systems; NRT, nicotine replacement therapies.