E-cigarettes safer than nicotine patches for quitting smoking during pregnancy

Written By :  Dr. Kamal Kant Kohli
Published On 2023-08-07 03:15 GMT   |   Update On 2023-10-12 10:52 GMT

UK: A recent study published in NIHR Journals Library suggests that pregnant women should also consider e-cigarettes. The researchers say this is most likely because e-cigarettes were more effective in reducing the use of conventional cigarettes. Low birth weight has been linked with poor health later in life.Smoking during pregnancy can harm developing babies, especially their growth....

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UK: A recent study published in NIHR Journals Library suggests that pregnant women should also consider e-cigarettes. 

The researchers say this is most likely because e-cigarettes were more effective in reducing the use of conventional cigarettes. Low birth weight has been linked with poor health later in life.

Smoking during pregnancy can harm developing babies, especially their growth. Current guidelines recommend that pregnant smokers who find quitting difficult should be provided with nicotine replacement products and stop-smoking services usually recommend nicotine patches.

The study included 1,140 pregnant women who were trying to stop smoking and were divided into two groups. Half of the women received e-cigarettes; the other half received nicotine patches. Both approaches were equally safe. The only meaningful difference was that fewer women in the e-cigarette group had children with low birthweight (weighing less than 2,500 grams).

At the end of their pregnancy, women reported whether they had quit. However, some women had quit smoking using a product they were not assigned, mostly women given patches stopping with the help of e-cigarettes they had procured for themselves.

When the researchers looked at successful quitters who only used the treatment they were allocated, almost twice as many women quit with e-cigarettes than with nicotine patches.

The researchers looked at safety outcomes, including low birth weight, baby intensive care admissions, miscarriage, stillbirth, and premature birth.

It is not clear whether nicotine is harmful to developing babies. The National Institute of Health and Care Excellence (NICE) states that most health problems are caused by toxins other than nicotine in cigarettes and therefore recommends that nicotine replacement therapy (such as nicotine patches, gum and mouth spray) is considered alongside behavioural support. However, most pregnant women still struggle to quit.

E-cigarettes can be seen as a form of nicotine replacement therapy, but they have an advantage over nicotine gum and patches in allowing smokers to select the strength and flavours they like and make the transition to stopping smoking easier. This is most likely why e-cigarettes have been shown more effective than traditional nicotine replacement therapy in people who are not pregnant.

Peter Hajek, Director of the Health and Lifestyle Research Unit, Wolfson Institute of Population Health, Queen Mary University of London said: “E-cigarettes seem more effective than nicotine patches in helping pregnant women to quit smoking and because of this, they seem to also lead to better pregnancy outcomes. The evidence-based advice to smokers already includes, among other options, a recommendation to switch from smoking to e-cigarettes. Such a recommendation can now be extended to smokers who are pregnant as well.’

Reference:

Christopher Griffiths, Helping pregnant smokers quit: A multi-centre randomised controlled trial of electronic cigarette versus nicotine replacement therapy, https://doi.org/10.3310/AGTH6901.

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Article Source : Health Technology Assessment

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