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Comparison of nicotine exposure during pregnancy when smoking and abstinent with nicotine replacement therapy: systematic review and meta-analysis

Hickson, C.; Lewis, S.; Campbell, K. A.; Cooper, S.; Berlin, I.; Claire, R.; Oncken, C.; Coleman-Haynes, T.; Coleman, T.

Comparison of nicotine exposure during pregnancy when smoking and abstinent with nicotine replacement therapy: systematic review and meta-analysis Thumbnail


Authors

C. Hickson

S. Cooper

I. Berlin

R. Claire

C. Oncken

T. Coleman-Haynes

TIM COLEMAN tim.coleman@nottingham.ac.uk
Professor of Primary Care



Abstract

Background and aims: Smoking during pregnancy is strongly associated with negative pregnancy and perinatal outcomes. Some guidelines recommend nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) for smoking cessation during pregnancy but adherence with NRT is generally poor and could be partially‐explained by nicotine‐related safety concerns. We compared pregnant women's cotinine and nicotine exposures from smoking with those when they were abstinent from smoking and using NRT.
Design: Systematic review with meta‐analysis and narrative reporting. Twelve studies were included: in most only one type of NRT was used. Seven were quality‐assessed and judge of variable quality.
Setting: Studies from any setting that reported nicotine or cotinine levels when smoking and later when abstinent and using NRT
Participants: Pregnant women who smoked and became abstinent but used NRT either in a cessation study or in a study investigating other impacts of NRT
Measurements: We quality‐assessed longitudinal cohort studies using a modified version of the Newcastle‐Ottawa scale. For meta‐analysis, we used mean within‐person differences in cotinine or nicotine levels when smoking and at later follow up when abstinent and using NRT. Where such data were not available, we calculated differences in group mean levels and reported these narratively, indicating where data were not completely longitudinal.
Findings: Of the 12 included studies, four cotinine‐measuring studies (n = 83) were combined in a random effects meta‐analysis; the pooled estimate for the mean difference (95% confidence intervals) in cotinine levels between when women were smoking and abstinent but using NRT was 75.3 (57.1 to 93.4) ng/ml (I2 = 42.1%, p = 0.11). Of eight narratively‐described studies, six reported lower cotinine and/or nicotine levels when abstinent and using NRT; two had mixed findings with higher levels when abstinent but using NRT reported from at least one assay time point.
Conclusions: Pregnant women who use nicotine replacement therapy instead of smoking reduce their nicotine exposure.

Citation

Hickson, C., Lewis, S., Campbell, K. A., Cooper, S., Berlin, I., Claire, R., …Coleman, T. (2019). Comparison of nicotine exposure during pregnancy when smoking and abstinent with nicotine replacement therapy: systematic review and meta-analysis. Addiction, 114(3), 406-424. https://doi.org/10.1111/add.14473

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Oct 8, 2018
Online Publication Date Oct 13, 2018
Publication Date Mar 1, 2019
Deposit Date Oct 23, 2018
Publicly Available Date Oct 23, 2018
Journal Addiction
Print ISSN 0965-2140
Electronic ISSN 1360-0443
Publisher Wiley
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 114
Issue 3
Pages 406-424
DOI https://doi.org/10.1111/add.14473
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1180694
Publisher URL https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/add.14473

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