Abstract

SignificanceA growing number of adults use more than one tobacco product, with dual use of cigarettes and e-cigarettes being the most common combination. Monitoring sex disparities in tobacco use is a public health priority. However, little is known regarding whether dual users differ by sex. MethodsData came from Waves 4–6 (12/2016–11/2021) of the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health Study, a US nationally-representative longitudinal survey. This analysis included current adult dual users of cigarettes and e-cigarettes. We used weighted generalized estimating equations to assess the association between sex and (1) making a cigarette quit attempt (n = 1882 observations from n = 1526 individuals) and (2) smoking cessation (n = 2081 observations from n = 1688 individuals) across two wave pairs, adjusting for age, education, ethnicity, time-to-first cigarette after waking, and e-cigarette use frequency. ResultsAmong US dual users, 14.1% (95% Confidence Intervals [Cl] = 11.9–16.4) of females and 23.4% (20.0–26.9) of males were young adults (aged 18–24), 11.7% (9.2–14.2) of females and 14.4% (11.6–17.2) of males had <high school education, and 82.2% (79.4–84.5) of females and 78.7% (75.1–82.4) of males were white. Overall, 44.9% (41.6–48.1) of females compared with 37.4% (33.5–41.3) of males made an attempt to quit smoking between a baseline and follow-up wave (Adjusted Risk Ratio [ARR] = 1.23, 1.05–1.45). In contrast, there were no apparent differences between females (22.1%, 19.0–25.2) and males (24.3%, 21.5–27.1) in smoking cessation (ARR = 1.06, 0.84–1.35). ConclusionUS females who dual use e-cigarettes and cigarettes were more likely to attempt to quit smoking, but not more likely to succeed at quitting, than males.

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