A multi-university team led by Keck Medicine of USC researchers has found, for the first time, that using electronic cigarettes, or “vaping,” is associated with a propensity to start smoking cigarettes or use other tobacco products.

Based on a survey of 2,530 14-year-olds at 10 public high schools in Los Angeles, the team found that teens who use e-cigarettes were more likely to transition to smokeable tobacco products.

The findings were published Aug. 18 in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

“E-cigarettes may be drawing a new generation of teens into recreational nicotine use because they are high-tech, can be purchased somewhat easily, come in enticing flavors and have a perception that they’re not harmful,” said Adam Leventhal, PhD, associate professor and director of the USC Health, Emotion and Addiction Laboratory at the Keck School of Medicine. “Some e-cigarette devices appear to be very efficient at delivering nicotine to the lungs and brain. If you enjoy the experience of inhaling nicotine in e-cigarettes, it makes sense that you would be open to trying other nicotine products, like cigarettes, hookah, and cigars.”

The research is among the first to be released by a Tobacco Center of Regulatory Science (TCORS), funded by the federal Food and Drug Administration through the National Institutes of Health (NIH). One of 14 TCORS was established in 2013 at the Department of Preventive Medicine at the Keck School of Medicine.

The longitudinal study included 2,530 students who had never smoked tobacco when they were first surveyed at the start of ninth grade. Of these students, at the first survey, 222 had used e-cigarettes (also known as “vaping”) and 2,308 had never vaped.  The students were surveyed again in six months and 12 months. By the six-month mark, 30.7 percent of the e-cigarette users had started smoking one or more combustible tobacco products including cigarettes, cigars and hookahs, as compared with 8.1 percent who had never used e-cigarettes. At the 12-month mark, as the students were heading into 10th grade, differences in rates of tobacco smoking persisted between students who had used e-cigarettes versus those who had not.

Leventhal’s research team conducted the e-cigarette study as part of a larger substance abuse and mental health study funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA).

The research team includes Matthew Kirkpatrick, PhD, Jennifer Unger, PhD, Steve Sussman, PhD,  Matthew Stone, Rubin Khoddam and Jonathan Samet, MD, of USC; Janet Audrain-McGovern, PhD, from the University of Pennsylvania; David Strong, PhD, of the University of California, San Diego, and Nathaniel Riggs, PhD, from Colorado State University.

The study was funded by the NIH, through NIDA and the National Cancer Institute.

— Leslie Ridgeway