Vaping Transitions and Incident Depressive Symptoms among Young Adults: A Marginal Structural Model Analysis.

depression e-cigarettes marginal structural models mental health vaping young adults

Journal

American journal of epidemiology
ISSN: 1476-6256
Titre abrégé: Am J Epidemiol
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 7910653

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
16 Jul 2024
Historique:
received: 17 08 2023
revised: 24 05 2024
medline: 17 7 2024
pubmed: 17 7 2024
entrez: 16 7 2024
Statut: aheadofprint

Résumé

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 four 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 2017-2021. Stabilized inverse probability of treatment and censoring weights adjusted for time-dependent confounders and selection bias. Among n=3,496 observations (1,806 participants, mean pooled baseline age=19.5), 8.1% reported persistent vaping from T to T+1, 6.2% reported discontinuation (i.e., use at T and no use at T+1), 6.5% initiated e-cigarettes (i.e., no use at T and use at T+1), and 79.2% reported persistent nonuse at both time-points. Compared to persistent vaping at two waves, persistent nonuse (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 naïve 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.

Identifiants

pubmed: 39013790
pii: 7714793
doi: 10.1093/aje/kwae225
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Informations de copyright

© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.

Auteurs

Alyssa F Harlow (AF)

University of Southern California, Department of Population and Public Health Sciences, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
University of Southern California, Institute for Addiction Science, Los Angeles, CA, USA.

Andrew C Stokes (AC)

Boston University School of Public Health, Department of Global Health, Boston, MA, USA.

Dae-Hee Han (DH)

University of Southern California, Department of Population and Public Health Sciences, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
University of Southern California, Institute for Addiction Science, Los Angeles, CA, USA.

Adam M Leventhal (AM)

University of Southern California, Department of Population and Public Health Sciences, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
University of Southern California, Institute for Addiction Science, Los Angeles, CA, USA.

Jessica L Barrington-Trimis (JL)

University of Southern California, Department of Population and Public Health Sciences, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
University of Southern California, Institute for Addiction Science, Los Angeles, CA, USA.

Classifications MeSH