The study, involving almost 900 smokers, found that 18 percent of
e-cigarette users were smoke-free after a year, compared to 9.9
percent who tried quitting using other products.
"This is great news for cigarette smokers who want to quit," said
Richard Miech, from the University of Michigan in the United States
who has studied e-cigarettes but was not involved in this trial.
"This evidence is persuasive."
E-cigarettes have no tobacco, but contain nicotine-laced liquids
that the user inhales in a vapor. Many big tobacco companies,
including British American Tobacco, Imperial Brands and Japan
Tobacco, sell e-cigarettes.
Using e-cigarettes, or "vaping", is considered by many health
experts to be an effective way for smokers to give up tobacco, but
the scientific community has been divided over their potential
public health benefits.
Independent experts said the latest trial, funded by Britain's
National Institute for Health Research and carried out by
researchers from Queen Mary University of London, was robust and
well-conducted.
Some research has previously suggested e-cigarettes might help
smokers cut back or quit altogether, but other studies have raised
concerns about their use among teenagers.
This study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, found
a stronger e-cigarette effect than previous trials. The researchers
said this might be due to the inclusion of smokers seeking help, the
provision of face-to-face support, and allowing the e-cigarette
users to choose their own liquids.
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In the trial, 886 smokers were randomly divided into groups to
receive either up to three months' supply of nicotine replacement
products such as patches, gum, lozenges and sprays, or an
e-cigarette starter pack with one or two bottles of liquid and
encouragement to buy their own choice of future supplies.
All participants were also tested to see if they were still smoking
tobacco cigarettes, and had weekly one-to-one support for at least
four weeks. The researchers said one reason e-cigarettes were found
to be more effective may be that they allow for better tuning of
nicotine doses to individual needs.
Jamie Hartmann-Boyce, a behavioral expert at Britain's Oxford
University, said the study adds to growing evidence that
e-cigarettes can improve health by helping smokers quit.
"More research is needed on the effects of long-term electronic
cigarette use, but experts agree e-cigarettes are considerably less
harmful than smoking, so switching...is likely to bring substantial
health gains," she said.
(Reporting by Kate Kelland; Editing by Andrew Cawthorne)
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