Validation of the Wave 1 and Wave 2 Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) Study Indicators of Tobacco Dependence Using Biomarkers of Nicotine Exposure Across Tobacco Products.
David R StrongEric LeasMadison NobleMartha WhiteAllison M GlasserKristie TaylorKathryn C EdwardsKevin C FrissellWilson M ComptonKevin P ConwayElizabeth LambertHeather L KimmelMarushka L SilveiraLynn C HullDana van BemmelMegan J SchroederK Michael CummingsAndrew HylandJune FengBenjamin BlountLanqing WangRay NiauraPublished in: Nicotine & tobacco research : official journal of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco (2021)
This study suggests that smoking cigarettes leads to the most coherent pattern of associations consistent with a syndrome of TD. Because cigarettes continue to be prevalent and harmful, efforts to decrease their use may be accelerated via conventional means (e.g., smoking cessation interventions and treatments), but also perhaps by decreasing their dependence potential. The implications for noncombustible tobacco products are less clear as the stability of tobacco use patterns that include products such as e-cigarettes continue to evolve. TD, nicotine exposure measures, and consumption could be used in studies that attempt to understand and predict product-specific tobacco use behavioral outcomes.