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No health benefits among adults who used both e-cigarettes and traditional cigarettes

Research Highlights:

  • A study of more than 24,000 U.S. adults found that the combined use of traditional cigarettes and e-cigarettes does not reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease and likely leads to harmful health effects similar to smoking cigarettes exclusively.

  • Compared to people who only smoked cigarettes, people who used both traditional cigarettes and e-cigarettes had no significant reduction in risk for heart attack, heart failure or stroke, nor for any self-reported cardiovascular disease outcome.

  • Researchers found that people who used only e-cigarettes had fewer self-reported cardiovascular events than people who only smoked traditional cigarettes. However, the number of reported heart events was too low to draw definitive conclusions about the effects of exclusive e-cigarette use in the studys sample. Researchers note more long-term data on e-cigarette use are needed.

Embargoed until 4 a.m. CT/5 a.m. ET Friday, May 6, 2022

(NewMediaWire) - May 06, 2022 - DALLAS - People who use both traditional (combustible) cigarettes and e-cigarettes do not reduce their risk of cardiovascular disease compared to people who exclusively use traditional cigarettes, according to new research published today in theAmerican Heart Associations flagship, peer-reviewed journalCirculation.

Traditional cigarette smoking is well-established as contributing to a broad range of serious health conditions. Nearly 1 in 5 deaths in the U.S. each year are attributed to cigarette smoking and secondhand smoke exposure, according to the American Heart Associations Heart Disease and Stroke Statistic 2022 Update. E-cigarettes, which contain many toxic chemicals, are becoming increasingly popular as another way for people to consume nicotine.

The fact that dual use - using both traditional, combustible cigarettes and e-cigarettes - had similar cardiovascular disease risk to smoking cigarettes only is an important finding as many Americans are taking up e-cigarettes in an attempt to reduce smoking for what they perceive is a lower risk, said Andrew C. Stokes, Ph.D., corresponding and senior author of the study, and an assistant professor in the department of global health at Boston University School of Public Health. It is common for people to try to switch from traditional cigarettes to e-cigarettes and get caught in limbo using both products.

To examine the relationship among cardiovascular disease, e-cigarette use and the dual use of traditional cigarettes and e-cigarettes, researchers reviewed data from the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) Study, a nationally representative study with five annual waves of self-reported information on health and nicotine product use collected from 2013 to 2019. After adjustments for age, sex and race/ethnicity, the study focused on more than 24,000 adults, of whom 50% were age 35 or younger, and 51% were women.