Health

E-cigarettes may work as well as nicotine patches

Electronic cigarettes worked just as well as nicotine patches to help smokers quit, according to the first study to compare them.

Quit smoking rates comparable for electronic cigarettes and nicotine replacement patches

Electronic cigarettes worked just as well as nicotine patches to help smokers quit, according to the first study to compare them.

E-cigarettes are battery-operated products that look like real cigarettes and turn nicotine into a vapour inhaled by the user. Since the devices hit the market nearly a decade ago, sales have spiked so quickly some analysts predict they will outsell traditional cigarettes within a decade.

There's been little information about the safety of e-cigarettes or their effectiveness as quit smoking aids. (Ed Andrieski/Associated Press)

E-cigarettes are often marketed as a less harmful alternative to traditional smokes and come in flavors including cinnamon, vanilla and cherry.

"This research provides an important benchmark for e-cigarettes," said Chris Bullen, director of the National Institute for Health Innovation at the University of Auckland in New Zealand, the study's lead author. Until now, there has been little information about the effectiveness or safety of e-cigarettes. "We have now shown they are about as effective as a standard nicotine replacement product."

Bullen and colleagues recruited 657 adult smokers in Auckland who wanted to quit for the study. Nearly 300 got nicotine-containing e-cigarettes while roughly the same number got nicotine patches. Just over 70 people got placebo e-cigarettes without any nicotine. Each group used the e-cigarettes or patches for 13 weeks.

After six months, similar rates of smokers — 6 to 7 per cent — managed to quit after using either the nicotine-containing e-cigarettes or patches. Only 4 per cent of smokers using the placebo e-cigarettes successfully quit.

Among smokers who hadn't managed to quit, nearly 60 per cent of those using e-cigarettes had cut down the number of cigarettes smoked by at least half versus 41 per cent of those using nicotine patches. Smokers were also much bigger fans of the e-cigarettes; nearly 90 per cent of users said they would recommend them to a friend compared to just over half of people who got patches.

Researchers also found similar rates of side-effects in smokers that used the e-cigarettes and the patches. The most common side effect in all groups was breathing problems.

The study was published online Sunday in the journal Lancet and presented at a meeting of the European Respiratory Society in Barcelona, Spain. The e-cigarettes used in the study were provided free by the company and the study was paid for by the Health Research Council of New Zealand, a government funder.

Peter Hajek, an anti-smoking expert at Queen Mary University of London, called it a "pioneering" study and said health officials should seriously consider recommending e-cigarettes to smokers who want to quit or cut down.

"E-cigarettes also have the potential to replace cigarettes as a consumer product, so their value is not just as a treatment," he said. Hajek authored an accompanying commentary in the Lancet. "That could stop the tobacco-related disease and death epidemic if everyone switches to a safer way of nicotine delivery," he said.

Hajek said that even though more studies were needed on the long-term safety of e-cigarettes, there weren't any imminent warning signs.

"E-cigarettes may not be perfectly safe, but even if some currently unknown risk materializes, they are likely to be orders of magnitude safer than normal cigarettes," he said.

The European Union and Britain are planning to regulate e-cigarettes as medical devices, a decision that has provoked criticism from some scientists who argue that would limit their availability to help smokers while cigarettes are not as tightly regulated. It is the tar and other toxins in cigarettes which are deadly, not the nicotine.

In the U.S., the FDA plans to assert regulatory authority over the fast-growing category in the near future. E-cigarettes could also still be regulated as drugs or drug-delivery devices, if they are "marketed for therapeutic purposes" — for example, as a stop-smoking aid.

Bullen suggested e-cigarettes could be monitored like lifestyle or consumer products to avoid restricting their access.

"There needs to be a middle ground where regulation is commensurate with the risk," he said. "For people who are dependent on nicotine, we've got to provide them with a safer alternative …crushing their availability completely will be bad for public health."

Last week, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said children in the U.S. are increasingly trying electronic cigarettes. 

The percentage of high school students in the U.S. who reported ever using an e-cigarette rose from 4.7 per cent in 2011 to 10.0 per cent in 2012, the national survey suggested.