Menthol cigarettes and smoking cessation during an aided quit attempt.

Nicotine Tob Res

Physician Research Fellowship Program, Center for Chronic Disease Outcomes Research (a VA HSR&D Center of Excellence), Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Minneapolis, MN 55417, USA.

Published: March 2008

AI Article Synopsis

  • Menthol cigarettes appear to be more addictive and are smoked in higher rates by Black individuals, but research on their impact on quitting smoking is limited and inconsistent.
  • A recent study analyzed the effect of menthol smoking on cessation rates in a diverse group of smokers participating in a quit program, involving over 1,300 participants.
  • The findings revealed no significant differences in smoking abstinence rates related to menthol use or ethnicity, suggesting that menthol cigarettes do not negatively affect cessation success in older smokers receiving pharmacotherapy assistance.

Article Abstract

Menthol may make cigarettes more addictive and rates of menthol cigarette smoking are disproportionately higher among Black. However, few studies have examined the association between menthol cigarette smoking and cessation, and the studies to date have produced conflicting findings. The present study examines the effect of menthol cigarette smoking on cessation among a multi-ethnic sample of smokers making a pharmacotherapy-aided quit attempt. We hypothesized that menthol cigarette smoking would be associated with lower smoking abstinence rates and conducted a secondary analysis of data from a multi-site randomized controlled trial of an intervention designed to facilitate repeat tobacco cessation treatment (N = 1,343). The intervention consisted of a patient phone call and a computerized provider prompt. The primary outcome for this analysis was 7-day point prevalence smoking abstinence. The average age of the sample was 56 years old. Overall, 25% of the sample smoked menthol cigarettes: 19% of Whites, 62% of Blacks, and 25% of other ethnicity (p<.001). We observed no significant effects for menthol cigarette smoking or ethnicity on smoking abstinence rates. In conclusion, combined with findings from previous research, this study suggests that smoking menthol cigarettes does not decrease smoking cessation among older smokers during a quit attempt aided with pharmacotherapy.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14622200801901914DOI Listing

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