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Further investigation of gateway effects using the PATH study [version 2; peer review: 1 approved, 2 approved with reservations, 1 not approved]
- Source :
- F1000Research. 9:607
- Publication Year :
- 2020
- Publisher :
- London, UK: F1000 Research Limited, 2020.
-
Abstract
- Background: Interest exists in whether youth e-cigarette use (“vaping”) increases risk of initiating cigarette smoking. Using Waves 1 and 2 of the US PATH study we previously reported adjustment for vaping propensity using Wave 1 variables explained about 80% of the unadjusted relationship. Here data from Waves 1 to 3 are used to avoid over-adjustment if Wave 1 vaping affected variables recorded then. Methods: Main analyses M1 and M2 concerned Wave 2 never smokers who never vaped by Wave 1, linking Wave 2 vaping to Wave 3 smoking initiation, adjusting for predictors of vaping based on Wave 1 data using differing propensity indices. M3 was similar but derived the index from Wave 2 data. Sensitivity analyses excluded Wave 1 other tobacco product users, included other product use as another predictor, or considered propensity for smoking or any tobacco use, not vaping. Alternative analyses used exact age (not previously available) as a confounder not grouped age, attempted residual confounding adjustment by modifying predictor values using data recorded later, or considered interactions with age. Results: In M1, adjustment removed about half the excess OR (i.e. OR–1), the unadjusted OR, 5.60 (95% CI 4.52-6.93), becoming 3.37 (2.65-4.28), 3.11 (2.47-3.92) or 3.27 (2.57-4.16), depending whether adjustment was for propensity as a continuous variable, as quintiles, or the variables making up the propensity score. Many factors had little effect: using grouped or exact age; considering other products; including interactions; or using predictors of smoking or tobacco use rather than vaping. The clearest conclusion was that analyses avoiding over-adjustment explained about half the excess OR, whereas analyses subject to over-adjustment explained about 80%. Conclusions: Although much of the unadjusted gateway effect results from confounding, we provide stronger evidence than previously of some causal effect of vaping, though doubts still remain about the completeness of adjustment.
Details
- ISSN :
- 20461402
- Volume :
- 9
- Database :
- F1000Research
- Journal :
- F1000Research
- Notes :
- Revised Amendments from Version 1 Following comments made by the reviewers we have amended the original version of the paper in a number of ways. In the order of their appearance in the revised paper, the main changes can be summarized as follows: The methods section of the abstract now makes clearer the purpose of our Main Analyses. In the introduction, when discussing our first paper relating to the gateway effect, we show how many published papers we considered, and also refer to a recent meta-analysis by Khouja et al. At the end of the introduction we make the objectives of our work clearer. In the methods section, more detail is added to show how the analyses presented in the current paper relate to our earlier analyses based only on data from Waves 1 and 2 of the PATH study. In the discussion we have added a new paragraph starting “Other issues are possible biases...” comparing the youths considered in Main analysis M1 (Table 2) with those for whom no data on cigarettes were available at Wave 3 (mainly due to their not being followed-up), and with those who were followed up at Wave 3 but had missing data for some of the predictors. We also discuss why we did not consider more interactions of predictor variables than those we had considered originally. Later in the discussion a new paragraph starting “There have, by now…” comments on a number of other papers on the gateway effect based on the PATH study that have been published since the original version of our paper. Another new paragraph in the discussion starting “A question of interest...” estimates the extent to which an estimated gateway effect could affect the number of youths taking up cigarette smoking., , [version 2; peer review: 1 approved, 2 approved with reservations, 1 not approved]
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- edsfor.10.12688.f1000research.24289.2
- Document Type :
- research-article
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.24289.2