Addiction Potential of Cigarettes With Reduced Nicotine Content in Populations With Psychiatric Disorders and Other Vulnerabilities to Tobacco Addiction

IMPORTANCE: A national policy is under consideration to reduce the nicotine content of cigarettes to lower nicotine addiction potential in the United States. OBJECTIVE: To examine how smokers with psychiatric disorders and other vulnerabilities to tobacco addiction respond to cigarettes with reduced...

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Veröffentlicht in:JAMA psychiatry (Chicago, Ill.) Ill.), 2017-10, Vol.74 (10), p.1056-1064
Hauptverfasser: Higgins, Stephen T, Heil, Sarah H, Sigmon, Stacey C, Tidey, Jennifer W, Gaalema, Diann E, Hughes, John R, Stitzer, Maxine L, Durand, Hanna, Bunn, Janice Y, Priest, Jeff S, Arger, Christopher A, Miller, Mollie E, Bergeria, Cecilia L, Davis, Danielle R, Streck, Joanna M, Reed, Derek D, Skelly, Joan M, Tursi, Lauren
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:IMPORTANCE: A national policy is under consideration to reduce the nicotine content of cigarettes to lower nicotine addiction potential in the United States. OBJECTIVE: To examine how smokers with psychiatric disorders and other vulnerabilities to tobacco addiction respond to cigarettes with reduced nicotine content. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: A multisite, double-blind, within-participant assessment of acute response to research cigarettes with nicotine content ranging from levels below a hypothesized addiction threshold to those representative of commercial cigarettes (0.4, 2.3, 5.2, and 15.8 mg/g of tobacco) at 3 academic sites included 169 daily smokers from the following 3 vulnerable populations: individuals with affective disorders (n = 56) or opioid dependence (n = 60) and socioeconomically disadvantaged women (n = 53). Data were collected from March 23, 2015, through April 25, 2016. INTERVENTIONS: After a brief smoking abstinence, participants were exposed to the cigarettes with varying nicotine doses across fourteen 2- to 4-hour outpatient sessions. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Addiction potential of the cigarettes was assessed using concurrent choice testing, the Cigarette Purchase Task (CPT), and validated measures of subjective effects, such as the Minnesota Nicotine Withdrawal Scale. RESULTS: Among the 169 daily smokers included in the analysis (120 women [71.0%] and 49 men [29.0%]; mean [SD] age, 35.6 [11.4] years), reducing the nicotine content of cigarettes decreased the relative reinforcing effects of smoking in all 3 populations. Across populations, the 0.4-mg/g dose was chosen significantly less than the 15.8-mg/g dose in concurrent choice testing (mean [SEM] 30% [0.04%] vs 70% [0.04%]; Cohen d = 0.40; P 
ISSN:2168-622X
2168-6238
DOI:10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2017.2355