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The relationship between reported daily nicotine dose from NRT and daily cigarette consumption in pregnant women who smoke in an observational cohort study

Orton, Sophie; Szatkowski, Lisa; Naughton, Felix; Coleman, Tim; Clark, Miranda; Cooper, Sue; Dickinson, Anne; Emery, Joanne; Lewis, Sarah; McDaid, Lisa; Phillips, Lucy; Thomson, Ross

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Authors

SOPHIE ORTON SOPHIE.ORTON@NOTTINGHAM.AC.UK
Senior Research Fellow

Felix Naughton

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

Sue Cooper

Joanne Emery

Lisa McDaid



Abstract

Introduction For non-pregnant people unable to quit smoking, the NHS recommends nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) for smoking reduction. This is not recommended during pregnancy due to concerns about higher nicotine intake than smoking alone. We investigated the relationship between daily nicotine dose from NRT and cigarette consumption reported by pregnant women receiving smoking cessation support. Methods We conducted secondary analysis of data from currently smoking pregnant women, recruited from antenatal clinics (Nottingham University Hospitals, UK) or online between June 2019-September 2020. Participants set a quit date, received a prototype NRT adherence intervention, and reported cigarettes per day (CPD) and daily NRT dose (mg) via smartphone app for 28 days. Results 388 women were screened, 32 (8%) were eligible and joined the study. 24 (75%) submitted 510 app reports in total. 17 (71%) reported smoking and using NRT concurrently on at least one day, with concurrent use reported on 109 (21%) of app reports. The relationship between daily NRT dose and CPD followed an exponential decay curve of approximately 7%. In multilevel repeated measures modelling using 4 linear splines (knots 17, 40 and 85 mg/NRT), significant fixed effects of daily NRT dose on CPD were observed for splines 1, 3 and 4. The strongest association was spline 1 (0-17 mg/NRT), where each 10mg NRT increase was associated with a 0.6 CPD reduction (24% on average). Conclusions Among women in a cessation study, many smoked and used NRT concurrently; within these women, daily nicotine dose and heaviness of smoking were inversely related. Implications Findings have implications for the design of future interventions intended to reduce harm associated with smoking in pregnancy. They suggest using NRT alongside smoking in pregnancy could help some women reduce the number of cigarettes they smoke per day.

Citation

Orton, S., Szatkowski, L., Naughton, F., Coleman, T., Clark, M., Cooper, S., …Thomson, R. (2024). The relationship between reported daily nicotine dose from NRT and daily cigarette consumption in pregnant women who smoke in an observational cohort study. Nicotine and Tobacco Research, 26(2), 212-219. https://doi.org/10.1093/ntr/ntad140

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Aug 2, 2023
Online Publication Date Aug 3, 2023
Publication Date 2024-02
Deposit Date Aug 11, 2023
Publicly Available Date Aug 11, 2023
Journal Nicotine and Tobacco Research
Print ISSN 1462-2203
Electronic ISSN 1469-994X
Publisher Oxford University Press
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 26
Issue 2
Pages 212-219
DOI https://doi.org/10.1093/ntr/ntad140
Keywords smoking, pregnancy, nicotine replacement therapy, ecological momentary assessment data
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/23864628
Publisher URL https://academic.oup.com/ntr/advance-article/doi/10.1093/ntr/ntad140/7236495

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