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Serum Concentrations of Cotinine and Trans-3′-Hydroxycotinine in US Adults: Results From Wave 1 (2013–2014) of the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health Study
Author(s) -
Connie S. Sosnoff,
Kevin T. Caron,
James R. Akins,
Kristin Dortch,
Ronald E. Hunter,
Brittany Pine,
June Feng,
Benjamin C. Blount,
Yao Li,
Dana M. van Bemmel,
Heather L. Kimmel,
Kathryn C. Edwards,
Maciej Ł. Goniewicz,
Dorothy K. Hatsukami,
B. Rey de Castro,
John T. Bernert,
Stephen Arnstein,
Nicolette Borek,
Ying DengBryant,
Elena V. Mishina,
Charles Lawrence,
Andrew Hyland,
Stephen S. Hecht,
Kevin P. Conway,
James L. Pirkle,
Lanqing Wang
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
nicotine and tobacco research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.338
H-Index - 113
eISSN - 1469-994X
pISSN - 1462-2203
DOI - 10.1093/ntr/ntab240
Subject(s) - cotinine , smokeless tobacco , confidence interval , medicine , nicotine , tobacco product , population , confounding , environmental health , demography , tobacco use , sociology
The Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) Study is a nationally representative cohort of tobacco product users and nonusers. The study’s main purpose is to obtain longitudinal epidemiologic data on tobacco use and exposure among the US population. Aims and Methods Nicotine biomarkers—cotinine (COT) and trans-3′-hydroxycotinine (HCT)—were measured in blood samples collected from adult daily tobacco users and nonusers during Wave 1 of the PATH Study (2013–2014; n = 5012; one sample per participant). Participants’ tobacco product use and exposure to secondhand smoke were categorized based on questionnaire responses. Nonusers were subdivided into never users and recent former users. Daily tobacco users were classified into seven tobacco product use categories: exclusive users of cigarette, smokeless tobacco, electronic cigarette, cigar, pipe, and hookah, as well as polyusers. We calculated sample-weighted geometric mean (GM) concentrations of cotinine, HCT, and the nicotine metabolite ratio (NMR) and evaluated their associations with tobacco use with adjustment for potential confounders. Results The GMs (95% confidence intervals) of COT and HCT concentrations for daily tobacco users were 196 (184 to 208) and 72.5 (67.8 to 77.4) ng/mL, and for nonusers they were 0.033 (0.028 to 0.037) and 0.021 (0.018 to 0.023) ng/mL. Exclusive smokeless tobacco users had the highest COT concentrations of all user groups examined. The GM NMR in daily users was 0.339 (95% confidence interval: 0.330 to 0.350). Conclusions These nationally representative estimates of serum nicotine biomarkers could be the basis for reference ranges characterizing nicotine exposure for daily tobacco users and nonusers in the US adult population. Implications This report summarizes the serum nicotine biomarker measurements in Wave 1 of the PATH Study. We are reporting the first estimates of HCT in serum for daily tobacco users and nonusers in the noninstitutionalized, civilian US adult population; the first nationally representative serum COT estimates for daily exclusive users of different tobacco products and daily polyusers; and the first nationally representative estimate of the serum NMR in daily tobacco users by age, race/ethnicity, and sex.

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