1 / 42

How does Nicotine Addiction Start? Data from the Year 10 Survey

How does Nicotine Addiction Start? Data from the Year 10 Survey. Joseph R DiFranza, MD Department of Family Medicine and Community Health University of Massachusetts Medical School. The Hound of the Baskervilles Arthur Conan Doyle-1902.

faxon
Download Presentation

How does Nicotine Addiction Start? Data from the Year 10 Survey

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. How does Nicotine Addiction Start?Data from the Year 10 Survey Joseph R DiFranza, MD Department of Family Medicine and Community Health University of Massachusetts Medical School

  2. The Hound of the Baskervilles Arthur Conan Doyle-1902 • “The more outré and grotesque an incident is the more carefully it deserves to be examined, and the very point which appears to complicate a case is, when duly considered and scientifically handled, the one which is most likely to elucidate it.” –Sherlock Holmes

  3. The girl who didn’t read the text book

  4. The Development and Assessment of Nicotine Dependence in Youth (DANDY-1) • 681 7th year students were followed over 3 years

  5. Addiction as a Loss of Autonomy • From addictus,meaning assigned • A Roman magistrate would assign the loser to perform work or pay a forfeit to the victor. • Addiction does not mean self-destruction, it means you have an obligation to do something. • Loss of Autonomy-when quitting requires an effort or involves discomfort

  6. Hooked on Nicotine Checklist • 1) Have you ever tried to quit, but couldn’t? • 2) Do you smoke now because it is really hard to quit? • 3) Have you ever felt like you were addicted to tobacco?

  7. Hooked on Nicotine Checklist • 4) Do you ever have strong cravings to smoke? • 5) Have you ever felt like you really needed a cigarette? • 6) Is it hard to keep from smoking in places where you are not supposed to?

  8. Hooked on Nicotine Checklist • When you haven't smoked for a while do you… • 7) find it hard to concentrate? • 8) feel more irritable? • 9) feel a strong need or urge to smoke? • 10) feel nervous, restless or anxious?

  9. The Development and Assessment of Nicotine Dependence in Youth (DANDY-1) • Each of the 10 HONC symptoms had appeared within a few weeks of initiating smoking. • Median usage at symptom appearance was 2 cigarettes/week. • Girls developed symptoms after a mean of 21 days and boys after 183 days.

  10. The Development and Assessment of Nicotine Dependence in Youth (DANDY-1) • The appearance of one or more HONC symptoms predicted • A failed quit attempt (OR = 29) • Continued smoking (OR = 44) • Progression to daily smoking (OR = 58)

  11. Start: 2% Intermittent End: 4% 0.07 Start: 60% Sporadic End: 14% Start: 30% Occasional End: 5% Start: 9% Daily End: 4% Start: 0% Escalating End: 2% 0.25 0.05 0.02 0.02 0.07 0.11 0.53 0.21 0.42 0.14 0.04 0.05 Start: 0% Abstinent End: 72% Trajectory of Use Before HONC Symptoms

  12. Start: 0% Intermittent End: 10% 0.03 0.16 0.14 0.15 0.10 Start: 40% Sporadic End: 6% Start: 46% Occasional End: 15% Start: 14% Daily End: 22% Start: 0% Escalating End: 26% 0.27 0.46 0.29 0.05 0.18 0.23 0.44 0.06 0.36 0.15 0.20 0.13 Start: 0% Abstinent End: 21% Trajectory of Use After HONC Symptoms

  13. Nicotine Dependence in Teens Study • Quebec • Ongoing 13-year longitudinal cohort • n=1293 grade 7 students (age 12-13) in 10 high schools

  14. Months to Cigarette Use Milestones 12 243648 Months 0 Smokes daily 23 Smokes monthly 9 Smokes weekly Lifetime 100 cigs 19 Whole cigarette 3 Inhalation 2

  15. Onset of ND Symptoms 12 243648 Months 0 Tolerance 14 Cravings 5 Smokes daily 23 Withdrawal 12 ICD-10 Tobacco dependence 46 Smokes monthly 9 Smokes weekly Lifetime 100 cigs 19 Whole cigarette 3 Inhalation 2

  16. DANDY 2 study • N=217 inhalers followed up to 4 years • 10% had lost autonomy within 2 days • 25% had lost autonomy within 30 days • 25% had lost autonomy by the time they were smoking 1 cigarette/month • Students were smoking an average of 2 cigarettes/week when addiction started. • ICD-10 dependence as early as 13 days

  17. DANDY 2 study • Among subjects who had ever puffed on a cigarette a HONC symptom increased the risk of progressing to daily smoking: OR=196. • Among subjects who had inhaled a HONC symptom increased the risk of daily smoking: OR= 83.

  18. New Zealand 10th Year Survey • Three consecutive annual surveys 2002-2004 • 24,995 current smokers

  19. 100 90 80 70 60 Girls 50 Percent with Diminished Autonomy Boys 40 30 20 10 0 1 2 3 - 4 5 - 9 10 - 19 20 - 99 >100 Lifetime Cigarette Consumption

  20. Loss of Autonomy in Relation to Smoking Frequency

  21. 100 90 80 70 60 50 Percent 40 30 20 10 0 1 2 3 - 4 5 - 9 10 -19 20 - 99 >100 Lifetime Cigarette Consumption – actual data Proportion with Lost Autonomy Proportion Abstinent

  22. 10th Year Survey • Symptoms appear after one cigarette • The process proceeds faster in girls • It is well underway prior to daily use

  23. Chicago Study • 35% of youth who had experienced a symptom of dependence had done so within one month of initiation.

  24. The First Case Series on Nicotine Addiction • Abstinence provokes a desire to smoke in all addicted smokers. • How would you describe this need to someone who has never smoked? • Wanting • Craving • Needing

  25. Wanting • Wanting is a mild transient desire to smoke that is easily ignored. • “It’s like wanting some chocolate.”

  26. Craving • Craving is more intense than wanting and intrudes upon the person’s thoughts. • It is more persistent and is difficult to ignore. • “I feel like someone inside of me is really telling me to smoke.” • Craving “just, like, pops in your head, like someone is sending you a message.”

  27. Craving • Craving is like “being hungry, but instead of your stomach saying it, it’s your brain…it’s just hungry, except for a cigarette.” • “I’ve felt, like, physical urges, like just craving them, but not like a mental thing.”

  28. Needing • Needing is an intense and urgent desire to smoke that is impossible to ignore. The individual must smoke to restore a normal mental or physical state. • “Pretty urgent… you need it and you can’t get your mind off it.” • “You really want one. You know you need it. You know you’ll feel normal after smoking, and you have to smoke to feel normal again.”

  29. When addiction first develops • No withdrawal symptoms • Wanting • Wanting and Craving • Wanting, Craving, and Needing

  30. Clinical Staging of Nicotine Addiction • Stage 1 No withdrawal symptoms • Smokers can remain abstinent indefinitely without withdrawal symptoms. • Stage 2 Wanting • “If I go too long without smoking the first thing I will notice is a mild desire to smoke that I can ignore.” • Stage 3 Craving • “If I go too long without smoking, the desire for a cigarette becomes so strong that it is hard to ignore and it interrupts my thinking.” • Stage 4 Needing • “If I go too long without smoking, I just can’t function right, and I know I will have to smoke just to feel normal again.”

  31. The Latency to Withdrawal • “A little light bulb goes off and it’s like, alright, time [to smoke].” • The latency is the interval between smoking one cigarette and wanting, craving, or needing another. • Latency-to-wanting • Latency-to-craving • Latency-to-needing

  32. The Latency to Withdrawal • At the onset of addiction the latency-to-withdrawal may be longer than a week. • Repeated tobacco use causes the latencies to shrink. • The shortening of the latency drives the escalation in smoking.

  33. The Latency to Withdrawal • After smoking for 6 weeks, a 16-year-old girl noticed a Latency to Withdrawal of 2 days • which shortened to 4 hours by age 16½ • …to 2 hours by age 17, • …to 1.5 hours by age 18, • …to 1 hour by age 19, • …and to 30 to 45 minutes by age 21.

  34. The Latency to Withdrawal - Factors of 2 • 1 week (1 cig/wk) • 3.5 days (2 cig/wk) • 42 hours • 21 hours • 11.5 hours • 5.6 hours • 2.8 hours • 1.4 hours • 42 minutes (1 ppd) • 21 minutes (2 ppd) • In adolescents smoking 2 cigs/wk increases the risk for heavy adult smoking 174 fold

  35. Summary • A Loss of Autonomy marks the onset of addiction. • The addiction process begins with the first cigarette and progresses rapidly. • Addiction develops through the same sequence of Wanting, Craving, Needing in all smokers. • The addiction process is well underway in intermittent smokers. • The shortening of the Latency to Withdrawal drives the escalation of smoking and explains why early symptoms are powerful indicators of prognosis.

More Related