Early Adoption of Heated Tobacco Products Resembles that of E-cigarettes.
Thursday, August 18, 2022
Posted by: Natalia Gromov
Zhu
SH, Ong J, Wong S, Cole A, Zhuang YL, Shi Y.
Early Adoption of Heated
Tobacco Products Resembles that of E-cigarettes.
Tob Control. 2022;31(e1):e35-e40. doi:10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2020-056089
Background. Heated
tobacco products (HTP) generate nicotine-containing aerosol by heating tobacco
rather than burning it. The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has recently
authorised the sale of one HTP brand, iQOS, in the USA. This study examined the
awareness, use and risk perceptions of HTP in the USA following FDA
authorisation.
Methods. A
national probability sample of 20 449 US adults completed an online survey
between November 2019 and February 2020. In addition to assessing awareness and
use of HTP, two ratios were calculated: the ratio of those who experimented
with HTP given that they had heard about it (E/H) and the ratio of those who
currently used HTP given experimentation (C/E). These ratios for HTP were
compared against those for e-cigarettes from a similar national survey in 2012.
Results. Overall,
8.1% of respondents had heard of HTP. Only 0.55% had tried and 0.10% were
current users. The rate of experimentation among those who heard about HTP and
the rate of current use among experimenters were, however, similar to those for
e-cigarettes in 2012: E/H and C/E for HTP were 6.8% and 18.2%, respectively;
and 10.7% and 17.8%, respectively for e-cigarettes. The majority of respondents
considered HTP either less harmful than (11.6%), or equally harmful as
e-cigarettes (42.7%).
Conclusions. Only
a small fraction of US population in 2020 have tried any HTP. However, the
similarity in early adoption rates following awareness, suggests that future
adoption for HTP may be similar to that for e-cigarettes, if HTP are marketed
more aggressively.
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