E-cigarettes as an adjunct to standard smoking-cessation therapy :- Medznat
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Combining electronic cigarettes with counseling to improve smoking cessation

Smoking cessation Smoking cessation
Smoking cessation Smoking cessation

This randomized controlled trial sought to determine the safety and efficiency of electronic nicotine delivery systems (E-cigarettes) for smoking cessation.

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Key take away

E-cigarettes combined with counseling increase tobacco abstinence rates when compared to counseling alone.

Background

This randomized controlled trial sought to determine the safety and efficiency of electronic nicotine delivery systems (E-cigarettes) for smoking cessation.

Method

Adults who smoked at least 5 cigarettes daily and were willing to set a quit date were randomized to either an intervention group or a control group. The intervention included free E-cigarettes with e-liquids, standard smoking-cessation counseling, and optional self-paid nicotine-replacement therapy.

The control group was given counseling in conjunction with a voucher, which could be utilized for any purpose, including nicotine-substitution therapy. The key outcome was continuous, biochemically verified avoidance from tobacco at 6 months. Secondary outcomes encompassed self-reported abstinence from tobacco and all nicotine products, respiratory symptoms, and serious adverse events.

Result

A total of 1246 volunteers were enrolled (622 intervention, 624 control). At 6 months, the intervention group showed higher validated continuous abstinence from smoking when compared to the control group (relative risk, 1.77). Self-reported 7-day abstinence from smoking at 6 months was higher in the intervention group, though abstinence from all nicotine was lower. Furthermore, the intervention group experienced fewer serious adverse events and higher non-serious adverse events when compared to the control group, as shown in Table 1:

Conclusion

E-cigarettes combined with standard counseling were more effective in achieving tobacco abstinence than counseling alone, without evidence of increased serious adverse events.

Source:

The New England Journal of Medicine

Article:

Electronic Nicotine-Delivery Systems for Smoking Cessation

Authors:

Reto Auer et al.

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