On 2017 Jul 21, Samir Soneji commented:
We thank Joel Nitzkin for his interest in our article, which systematically reviewed 9 US-based longitudinal studies that assessed e-cigarette use and cigarette smoking among >17,000 adolescents and young adults. Our research concluded that e-cigarette use among adolescents who had never tried a cigarette was associated with subsequent cigarette smoking initiation and past 30-day cigarette smoking, with similar effect size across studies of adolescents and young adults. All of the studies used multivariable analysis to adjust for other factors that might make adolescent e-cigarette users at higher risk for use of multiple substances—risk factors such as friends who smoke, sensation seeking tendencies, and use of other substances like alcohol.
Nitzkin asserted three claims about the research. First, Nitzkin claimed that the studies provided no evidence that e-cigarette use is related to consistent daily cigarette smoking. Second, he claimed that e-cigarette use was simply a marker for high-risk youth who were more likely to smoke anyway. Third, he claimed that the decline in youth cigarette smoking over time at the population level proves e-cigarette use does not increase the probability of cigarette smoking at the individual level. Empirical evidence contradicts these claims, as we describe below.
Regarding Nitkin’s first claim that e-cigarette use is not related to consistent daily cigarette smoking, few adolescents smoke on a daily basis, which makes assessment of daily smoking impractical for most longitudinal studies that have a 1-2 year timeframe. Logically, smoking initiation is a necessary requisite to daily smoking. Moreover, recent longitudinal research found that smoking initiation identifies about two-thirds of adolescents who will be daily smokers two years later, with a false positive rate of 8 percent.1 In other words, smoking initiation is about as good at predicting eventual daily smoking as screening mammography is at predicting breast cancer.<sup>2</sup> Although not perfect, smoking initiation presents a public health concern especially given the growing body of evidence that e-cigarettes are used by some youth unlikely to have ever smoked cigarettes.<sup>1,3,4</sup> Furthermore, a recent longitudinal study by Leventhal et al. (2016) found that more frequent e-cigarette use at baseline was associated with more frequent and heavier patterns of cigarette smoking at follow-up using data from >3000 adolescents.<sup>5</sup> Thus, smoking initiation, which the studies examined, is a sensible predictor of future daily smoking, and the pattern of e-cigarette use seems to predict the pattern of eventual cigarette smoking.
Regarding Nitzkin’s second claim that e-cigarette users are just high-risk youth, the combined risk estimate represents a risk that adjusts for many risk factors, as we mentioned above, that would cause some adolescents to be at risk for using multiple substances. The fact that the adjusted estimate is very strong (odds ratio of almost 4) suggests to us that it is unlikely that one or more added covariables would completely confound the e-cigarette effect. Moreover, several studies concluded that adolescents who use e-cigarettes are medium-risk youth, not those who are necessarily destined to begin cigarette smoking anyway.<sup>6–10</sup> Furthermore, several longitudinal studies have reported that the association between e-cigarette use and smoking initiation was strongest among the lowest risk youth (i.e., youth who stated that they were unlikely to try smoking in the future).<sup>9,11,12</sup>
Regarding Nitzkin’s third claim that the recent decline in youth cigarette smoking proves e-cigarette use does not lead to cigarette use, youth cigarette smoking has been declining steadily in the US for the past 20 years and predates e-cigarettes.<sup>13,14</sup> In other words, this steady decline in youth cigarette smoking began long before the introduction of e-cigarettes into the US in 2007 and before e-cigarette use became prevalent in youth around 2011. So the decline in youth cigarette smoking cannot be attributed to the advent of the e-cigarette.
We believe our research underlines that the potential risks of e-cigarette use are significant and should not be discounted. Tobacco control efforts, including taxation, youth smoking prevention programs, and restrictions on tobacco advertising reduce youth smoking. The nearly twenty-year decline in youth smoking demonstrates the success of these tobacco control efforts despite youth e-cigarette use. We must acknowledge and address the public health harm posed by youth e-cigarette use to prevent a new generation of nicotine-addicted adult tobacco users.
References
<sup>1</sup> Sargent JD, Gabrielli J, Budney A, Soneji S, Wills TA. Adolescent smoking experimentation as a predictor of daily cigarette smoking. Drug Alcohol Depend. 2017;175:55-59. doi:10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2017.01.038.
<sup>2</sup> Ferrini R, Mannino E, Ramsdell E, Hill L. Screening mammography for breast cancer: American College of Preventive Medicine practice policy statement. Am J Prev Med. 1996;12(5):340-341.
<sup>3</sup> Barrington-Trimis JL, Urman R, Leventhal AM, et al. E-cigarettes, Cigarettes, and the Prevalence of Adolescent Tobacco Use. Pediatrics. July 2016:e20153983. doi:10.1542/peds.2015-3983.
<sup>4</sup> Dutra LM, Glantz SA. E-cigarettes and National Adolescent Cigarette Use: 2004–2014. Pediatrics. January 2017:e20162450. doi:10.1542/peds.2016-2450.
<sup>5</sup> Leventhal AM, Stone MD, Andrabi N, et al. Association of e-Cigarette Vaping and Progression to Heavier Patterns of Cigarette Smoking. JAMA. 2016;316(18):1918-1920. doi:10.1001/jama.2016.14649.
<sup>6</sup> Wills TA, Knight R, Williams RJ, Pagano I, Sargent JD. Risk Factors for Exclusive E-Cigarette Use and Dual E-Cigarette Use and Tobacco Use in Adolescents. Pediatrics. 2015;135(1):e43-e51. doi:10.1542/peds.2014-0760.
<sup>7</sup> Kristjansson AL, Mann MJ, Sigfusdottir ID. Licit and Illicit Substance Use by Adolescent E-Cigarette Users Compared with Conventional Cigarette Smokers, Dual Users, and Nonusers. J Adolesc Health Off Publ Soc Adolesc Med. 2015;57(5):562-564. doi:10.1016/j.jadohealth.2015.07.014.
<sup>8</sup> Thrasher JF, Abad-Vivero EN, Barrientos-Gutíerrez I, et al. Prevalence and Correlates of E-Cigarette Perceptions and Trial Among Early Adolescents in Mexico. J Adolesc Health Off Publ Soc Adolesc Med. 2016;58(3):358-365. doi:10.1016/j.jadohealth.2015.11.008.
<sup>9</sup> Barrington-Trimis JL, Urman R, Berhane K, et al. E-Cigarettes and Future Cigarette Use. Pediatrics. June 2016:e20160379. doi:10.1542/peds.2016-0379.
<sup>10</sup> Leventhal AM, Strong DR, Sussman S, et al. Psychiatric comorbidity in adolescent electronic and conventional cigarette use. J Psychiatr Res. 2016;73:71-78. doi:10.1016/j.jpsychires.2015.11.008.
<sup>11</sup> Primack BA, Soneji S, Stoolmiller M, Fine MJ, Sargent JD. Progression to traditional cigarette smoking after electronic cigarette use among US adolescents and young adults. JAMA Pediatr. September 2015:1-7. doi:10.1001/jamapediatrics.2015.1742.
<sup>12</sup> Wills TA, Knight R, Sargent JD, Gibbons FX, Pagano I, Williams RJ. Longitudinal study of e-cigarette use and onset of cigarette smoking among high school students in Hawaii. Tob Control. January 2016:1-6. doi:10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2015-052705.
<sup>13</sup> Johnston L, O’Malley PM, Miech R, Emerson P, Bachman J, Schulenberg J. Monitoring the Future National Survey Results on Drug Use, 1975-2015: Overview, Key Findings on Adolescent Drug Use. Ann Arbor: Institute for Social Research, The University of Michigan; 2016.
<sup>14</sup> Office on Smoking and Health. Trends in Current Cigarette Smoking. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention http://www.cdc.gov/tobacco/data_statistics/tables/trends/cig_smoking/. Accessed July 13, 2017.
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