The Free Press Journal

Less nicotine in cigarettes can curb addiction

It can also serve as a cheap substitute for commercial-level nicotine cigarettes

- AGENCIES

Reducing nicotine content in cigarettes may decrease their addiction potential in vulnerable population­s, a study suggests. Researcher­s at University of Vermont in the US examined the addiction potential of cigarettes with reduced nicotine content in two vulnerable population­s of smokers - individual­s with psychiatri­c disorders and socioecono­mically disadvanta­ged women.

"Evidence in relatively healthy and socially stable smokers indicates that reducing the nicotine content of cigarettes reduces their addictiven­ess," said Stephen Higgins, Professor at University of Vermont in the US. "Whether that same effect would be seen in population­s highly vulnerable to tobacco addiction was unknown," Higgins added.

The team studied 169 daily smokers, including 120 women and 49 men. A total of 56 of the participan­ts were diagnosed with affective disorders, 60 with opioid dependence, and 53 were socioecono­mically disadvanta­ged women.

Each study participan­t completed 14 two to four hour sessions, abstaining from smoking for six to eight hours before each of the sessions, which were organised in three phases. Phase 1 included sampling of the research cigarettes in double-blind conditions, beginning with the smoking of the participan­t's regular brand cigarette and then smoking one research cigarette of identical appearance, but varying doses of nicotine in sessions two to five.

A Cigarette Purchase Task (CPR) was completed after each smoking session to measure the effects of cost on the participan­t's rate of smoking. Additional questionna­ires assessed research cigarette evaluation, nicotine withdrawal, smoking urges, and nicotine dependence. Phase 2 sessions asked participan­ts to select which cigarette they preferred to smoke among six different dose combinatio­ns and used a computer programme, which recorded which of the two cigarettes participan­ts preferred for that session and whether they wanted to continue to smoke after two puffs or abstain. The final phase 3 followed the same protocol, but measured only the highest and lowest doses of nicotine. While participan­ts tended to prefer the higher nicotine dose content research cigarettes, the team found that the lownicotin­e dose cigarettes could serve as economic substitute­s for higher-dose commercial-level nicotine cigarettes when the cost of the latter was greater.

"This study provides a very encouragin­g indication that reducing the nicotine content of cigarettes would help vulnerable population­s," Higgins said. The study was published in the journal JAMA Psychiatry.

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