Grant Details
Grant Number: |
5R21CA267932-02 Interpret this number |
Primary Investigator: |
Majeed, Ban |
Organization: |
Augusta University |
Project Title: |
Effect of Tobacco Use Patterns on Toxicant Exposure and Successful Cessation: a Longitudinal Study Among Us Adult Cigarette Smokers |
Fiscal Year: |
2022 |
Abstract
PROJECT SUMMARY
Combustible cigarette smoking is the leading cause of preventable death and disease in the US. Each year,
more than 400,000 Americans die due to reasons related to tobacco use. Strong scientific evidence exists
linking smoking to elevated risk of pulmonary diseases, cardiovascular diseases (e.g. heart attack, heart
failure, and stroke), and multiple types of cancer (e.g. of the oral cavity, lung, esophagus, kidney, uterus, and
bone marrow). To curb these high rates of mortality and morbidity and protect the American people, the 2009
Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act granted the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) the
authority to regulate the manufacture, distribution, and marketing of all products that meet the statutory
definition of tobacco products, defined as any product made or derived from tobacco and intended for human
consumption. To inform science-based tobacco regulations, current rigorous research is necessary on the
factors associated with toxicant exposure and successful quitting since past work is less applicable to today’s
continually evolving tobacco market and use patterns. Tobacco use patterns now include a variety of flavored
combustible (e.g., little cigars) and non-combustible tobacco products (e.g. ECIGs) that may be used
concurrently (dual-/poly-product use). These patterns may produce different profiles of toxicant exposure (thus
influencing health outcomes), and different levels of nicotine dependence (thus influencing cessation rates).
This response to RFA-OD-19-022 uses state-of-the-art statistical techniques to analyze national longitudinal
data from five waves of the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) Study, to identify classes of
smokers in terms of their toxicant exposure and to understand trends in overtime patterns of nicotine
dependence and tobacco use and their relationship with successful quitting. The two specific aims are to: 1)
Conduct cluster analysis on tobacco biomarkers of adult current cigarette smokers and group smokers into
clusters based on concentrations of tobacco toxicant biomarkers (i.e., urinary biomarkers of exposure to
nicotine, TSNAs, PAHs, and VOCs) collected at Wave 3 of the PATH study. We will examine whether use
patterns (e.g. flavor, exclusive, dual, and poly use), personal characteristics, and nicotine dependence vary by
cluster membership. 2) Perform growth curve analysis to model change over time in nicotine dependence to
identify and describe dependence trajectories (i.e. differential nicotine dependence patterns) during four
consecutive waves and examine the relationship between these trajectories, overtime change in tobacco use
patterns, and successful quitting (3+ m abstinence). In sum, this project addresses priority research questions
and is directly relevant to the mission of the FDA’s CTP. Resultant data could be leveraged to inform product
labeling and public health campaigns, especially those addressing toxicant exposure and dependence risk of
dual/poly product use. Until consumers are fully informed about the risks they take when engaging in dual/poly
tobacco product use, we can expect more and more of them to engage in this potentially hazardous behavior.
Publications
None