AI Article Synopsis

  • This systematic review investigates the effectiveness of electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) flavors in helping individuals quit smoking, analyzing various studies on this topic.
  • A total of 29 studies were included, focusing on quit intentions, attempts, and success rates, but the overall certainty of evidence was low regarding the impact of ENDS flavors on smoking cessation.
  • The study concludes that the current evidence is inconclusive due to inconsistent definitions and methods across studies, highlighting the need for more robust research, particularly randomized controlled trials.

Article Abstract

Background: Electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) come in numerous flavors and may aid smoking cessation. This systematic review examines evidence on the role of ENDS flavors in smoking cessation.

Methods: We searched EMBASE OVID, PsychInfo, and Medline databases for studies that: 1) examined cigarette cessation outcomes for persons using ENDS (intent, attempts, and success) and 2) reported results separated by respondent's ENDS flavor used. We extracted crude and adjusted odds ratios for associations between cessation outcomes and types of ENDS flavors used (nontobacco vs. tobacco/unflavored; nontobacco and nonmenthol vs. tobacco/unflavored and menthol). We did not consider cessation outcomes among people not using ENDS. We evaluated the evidence using the GRADE approach, focusing on consistency and reliability of findings across studies.

Results: 29 studies met inclusion criteria, producing 36 odds ratios (ORs) comparing cessation outcomes across ENDS flavor groups. Three ORs examined quit intent, five examined quit attempts, and 28 examined quit success. Using GRADE, we reached Low levels of certainty that there was not an association between ENDS flavor use and intention to quit smoking or making a quit attempt. There were Very Low levels of certainty that nontobacco flavored versus tobacco/unflavored ENDS use was not associated with smoking cessation success, with similar findings for nonmenthol and nontobacco compared to tobacco and menthol flavored ENDS.

Conclusion: The evidence about the role of different flavored ENDS use and smoking cessation outcomes is inconclusive, reflecting highly heterogeneous study definitions and methodological limitations. More high-quality evidence, ideally from randomized controlled trials, is required.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10066538PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dadr.2023.100143DOI Listing

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