Alyssa F Harlow, Andrew C Stokes, Dae-Hee Han, Adam M Leventhal, Jessica L Barrington-Trimis
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The extent to which vaping influences depression is unclear but could be estimated through application of novel epidemiologic methods. Among a prospective cohort of young adults from California who screened negative for depression, we estimated repeated-measures marginal structural models to examine the association of 4 vaping transitions from time T to T + 1 (persistent use, discontinuation, initiation, persistent nonuse) with risk of clinically significant depressive symptoms at T + 1, simultaneously across three ~ 1.5-year time intervals between 2017 and 2021. Stabilized inverse probability of treatment and censoring weights adjusted for time-dependent confounders and selection bias. Among n = 3496 observations (1806 participants, mean pooled baseline age = 19.5), 8.1% reported persistent vaping from T to T + 1, 6.2% reported discontinuation (ie, use at T and no use at T + 1), 6.5% initiated e-cigarettes (ie, no use at T and use at T + 1), and 79.2% reported persistent nonuse at both time points. Compared to persistent vaping at 2 waves, persistent nonuse (relative risk [RR] = 0.76; 95% CI, 0.62-0.93) and discontinuation (RR = 0.71; 95% CI, 0.52-0.96) were associated with lower risk of depression. Associations were robust to sensitivity analyses, including restricting to tobacco-naive participants and varying temporal assumptions to reduce potential for reverse causation. Young adults who consistently avoid or discontinue vaping may be protected from depressive symptom occurrence.
期刊介绍:
The American Journal of Epidemiology is the oldest and one of the premier epidemiologic journals devoted to the publication of empirical research findings, opinion pieces, and methodological developments in the field of epidemiologic research.
It is a peer-reviewed journal aimed at both fellow epidemiologists and those who use epidemiologic data, including public health workers and clinicians.