On February 13 the Washington
Examiner ran my commentary on the FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb’s vow to
“narrow the off-ramp for adults who want to migrate off combustible tobacco and
onto e-cigs,” which would be a deadly mistake for many smokers. Read the article on the Examiner website (here)
and below.
Smokers need all the help they can get to quit cigarettes.
New research reported in the prestigious New
England Journal of Medicine (NEJM)
confirms that e-cigarettes are significantly more effective than FDA-approved
nicotine medicines in helping smokers end their deadly habit.
This study is impressive proof of the scientific concept
known as tobacco harm reduction, the substitution of vastly safer smoke-free
tobacco products – e-cigarettes and smokeless tobacco – by smokers who are
unable or unwilling to become nicotine and tobacco abstinent. Decades of scientific studies document that
dipping and chewing tobacco are 98 percent safer than inhaling smoke (here,
here,
here,
here,
here),
and the prestigious British Royal College of Physicians observed that “vapour
inhalation from the e-cigarettes available today is unlikely to exceed 5% of
the harm from smoking tobacco.” (here).
The NEJM article
describes a British clinical trial in which 886 smokers were given either a
refillable e-cigarette and one bottle of liquid, or nicotine medicines (pill,
gum or patch). E-cigarette users were
encouraged to experiment with liquids of different strengths and flavors. Nicotine users selected their preferred
products and they were allowed to use them in combination and to switch them up
as desired.
After one year, 18 percent of those in the e-cigarette group
were not smoking, compared with 9.9 percent in the nicotine medicine
group. That is, e-cigarette users were
twice as likely to quit than nicotine medicine users. Another 13 percent of e-cigarette users
reduced their smoking by at least 50 percent, compared to only 7 percent of
nicotine medicine users.
This study confirms the results of earlier, smaller clinical
trials in Italy (here
and here),
New Zealand (here)
and Greece (here). More importantly, it addresses the demand of
tobacco control activists for blue ribbon scientific proof. Among that group are regulators in the FDA. That agency’s historic mission has been to
judge the effectiveness of medicines before making them available to the public. Their primary assessment tool is the clinical
trial – a highly sophisticated and costly experiment, in which doctors control
the source and dosing of the medicine and all aspects of patient care.
Until now, doctors have considered smoking a disease, to be
treated with nicotine medicines, anti-depressives, nicotine blocking agents
(like varenicline), and behavioral counseling.
Clinical trials were used to validate such regimens, and success rates
have been abysmally low.
Today, e-cigarettes are upsetting the clinical trial
cart. As consumer products, they are
widely available to millions of smokers, making it extremely difficult, if not
impossible, to conduct controlled clinical trials (here). Consumers, not doctors, are making the
decisions in this environment. Instead
of clinical trials, the best evidence for consumer e-cigarette behavior can be
gleaned from surveys.
My university research group’s analysis of government survey
data shows that e-cigarettes were among the most commonly used quit aids by
American smokers in 2013-2014, and they were the only aid more likely to make
one a successful quitter than quitting cold-turkey (here). Other studies in the U.S. and the United
Kingdom have reported similar results, and together provide population-level,
real world proof that smokers are quitting with e-cigarettes (here).
In the UK, government officials and most medical societies
encourage smokers to switch to vastly safer cigarette alternatives. It’s time for their U.S. counterparts to
provide American smokers with the same lifesaving options (here). The new British study adds to the argument
against FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb’s vow to “narrow the off-ramp for
adults who want to migrate off combustible tobacco and onto e-cigs.” That would be a deadly mistake for many
smokers.
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