| 17 Septembre 2014
Because  of the risks of persistent smoking, all cancer patients who smoke  should be advised to quit. But the rising use of e-cigarettes has raised  many questions among patients and their health care providers including  whether e-cigarette use helps or hinders quitting efforts. Even  regulators are struggling with the complexities associated with  e-cigarettes as they weigh the benefits and risks to the general  population and subgroups of individuals. To  examine available clinical data about e-cigarette use and cessation  among cancer patients, Jamie Ostroff, PhD, of the Memorial Sloan  Kettering Cancer Center in New York City, and her colleagues studied  1074 cancer patients who smoked and were enrolled between 2012 and 2013  in a tobacco treatment program within a comprehensive cancer center. The  researchers observed a three-fold increase in e-cigarette use from 2012  to 2013 (10.6 percent versus 38.5 percent). At enrollment, e-cigarette  users were more nicotine dependent than non-users, had more prior quit  attempts, and were more likely to be diagnosed with lung or head and  neck cancers. At follow-up, e-cigarette users were just as likely as  non-users to be smoking. Seven day abstinence rates were 44.4 percent  versus 43.1 percent for e-cigarette users and non-users, respectively  (excluding patients who were lost to follow-up). “Consistent  with recent observations of increased e-cigarette use in the general  population, our findings illustrate that e-cigarette use among  tobacco-dependent cancer patients has increased within the past two  years,” said Dr. Ostroff. She stressed that the study had several  limitations, and additional studies are required. “Controlled research  is needed to evaluate the potential harms and benefits of e-cigarettes  as a potential cessation approach for cancer patients. In the meantime,  oncologists should advise all smokers to quit smoking traditional  combustible cigarettes, encourage use of FDA-approved cessation  medications, refer patients for smoking cessation counseling, and  provide education about the potential risks and lack of known benefits  of long-term e-cigarette use.”
In  a new study of cancer patients who smoke, those using e-cigarettes (in  addition to traditional cigarettes) were more nicotine dependent and  equally or less likely to have quit smoking traditional cigarettes than  non-users. Published early online in CANCER,  a peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer Society, the findings  raise doubts about the potential benefits of e-cigarettes for helping  cancer patients give up smoking.