| Literature DB >> 34112267 |
Ashley R Ethier1, Ty L McKinney2, Laurie Sykes Tottenham1, Jennifer L Gordon3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Women attempt to quit smoking less often than men and are less likely to maintain abstinence. Reproductive hormones have been postulated as a reason for this sex difference, though this remains to be clarified. Research suggests that estradiol and progesterone may influence nicotine addiction, though various methodologies have led to inconsistent findings. The current study aimed to directly examine the effect of reproductive hormones on women's smoking behavior.Entities:
Keywords: Estradiol; Estrogen; Estrone-3-glucuronide (E1G); Menstrual cycle; Pregnanediol glucuronide (PdG); Progesterone; Reproductive hormones; Smoking behavior; Urinary metabolites
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34112267 PMCID: PMC8194227 DOI: 10.1186/s13293-021-00384-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Sex Differ ISSN: 2042-6410 Impact factor: 5.027
Fig. 1Schematic of the timing of the smoking diary entries and urine sample collections within the menstrual cycle
Demographic and hormonal variables by menstrual phase
| Variable | M (SD) or n (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| Number of cigarettes/day | 14.1 (4) | |
| Number of years as an individual who smokes | 12.1 (6.7) | |
| Age | 29 (7) | |
| Ethnicity | White | 18 (86%) |
| Aboriginal | 2 (9%) | |
| Other | 1 (5%) | |
| Marital status | Single | 14 (67%) |
| Divorced | 1 (5%) | |
| Married | 3 (14%) | |
| Cohabitating | 3 (14%) | |
| Highest level of education | Some high school | 3 (14%) |
| High school diploma | 8 (38%) | |
| Some university | 6 (29%) | |
| Bachelor’s degree | 4 (19%) | |
| Gross household income | No response | 4 (19%) |
| Less than 19,999 | 2 (10%) | |
| 20,000 to 34,999 | 1 (5%) | |
| 35,000 to 49,999 | 4 (19%) | |
| 50,000 to 69,999 | 3 (14%) | |
| 70,000 to 112,999 | 7 (34%) | |
Fig. 2Participant recruitment and counter-balancing randomization
Linear and quadratic relationships between hormone levels and psychological variables
| Number of cigarettes | Need for | Enjoyment of | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fixed effect β | SE | df | p value | Fixed effect β | SE | df | p value | Fixed effect β | SE | df | p value | |
| Intercept | − | |||||||||||
| PdG linear | 3.4×10-5 | 5.9×10-5 | 189.2 | .559 | 1.4×10-5 | 1.1×10-5 | 189.1 | .201 | 9.3×10-6 | 1.0×10-5 | 188.9 | .361 |
| E1G linear | 2.6×10-6 | 4.6×10-6 | 191.2 | .580 | − | − | ||||||
| PdG×E1G | −1.3×10-9 | 1.7×10-9 | 197.2 | .444 | −4.7×10-10 | 3.1×10-10 | 194.8 | .133 | −4.9×10-10 | 2.9×10-10 | 191.2 | .091 |
| Intercept | ||||||||||||
| PdG linear | − | −2.2×10-5 | 2.1×10-5 | 181.1 | .310 | −2.4×10-6 | 2.0×10-5 | 187.8 | .902 | |||
| PdG quadratic | −3.0×10-10 | 7.8×10-10 | 190.6 | .720 | 4.1×10-10 | 7.3×10-10 | 188.4 | .902 | ||||
| E1G linear | −2.8×10-6 | 6.7×10-6 | 191.8 | .676 | − | − | ||||||
| E1G quadratic | 1.8×10-11 | 2.1×10-11 | 201.6 | .391 | 1.5×10-12 | 4.1×10-12 | 197.3 | .713 | 3.9×10-12 | 3.8×10-12 | 191.5 | .304 |
| PdG×E1G | −3.9×10-9 | 2.0×10-9 | 194.3 | .052 | −3.7×10-10 | 3.8×10-10 | 191.9 | .328 | −5.1×10-10 | 3.5×10-10 | 189.0 | .146 |
Fig. 3Quadratic model of PdG levels and the number of cigarettes smoked
Change score-based statistical modeling of hormone and smoking behavior relationships
| Number of cigarettes | Need for | Enjoyment of cigarettes | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fixed effect β | SE | df | p value | Fixed effect β | SE | df | p value | Fixed effect β | SE | df | p value | |
| ∆ PdG | −9.8×10-5 | 5.2×10-5 | 179.6 | .062 | 4.4×10-6 | 1.0×10-5 | 179.2 | .668 | −5.8×10-6 | 9.5×10-6 | 188.9 | .543 |
| ∆ E1G | 1.1×10-6 | 3.3×10-6 | 177.7 | .730 | −1.0×10-10 | 6.4×10-7 | 177.8 | .110 | 7.8×10-7 | 5.9×10-7 | 189.4 | .191 |
∆ PdG × ∆ E1G | −1.2×10-10 | 1.7×10-10 | 186.4 | .486 | 9.6×10-12 | 1.6×10-10 | 180.8 | .952 | ||||
Fig. 4Change score-based statistical modeling of hormone interaction and number of cigarettes smoked