E-cigarettes found more effective in helping smokers quit

IANS  |  London 

If you are thinking of quitting smoking, electronic cigarettes, commonly known as e-cigarettes, stand a better chance of helping you achieve your goal than replacement treatments, such as patches and gum, show results of a major clinical trial.

The trial, which involved almost 900 smokers who also received additional behavioural support, found that 18 per cent of e-users were smoke-free after a year, compared to 9.9 per cent of participants who were using other replacement therapies.

"This is the first trial to test the efficacy of modern in helping smokers quit. were almost twice as effective as the 'gold standard' combination of nicotine replacement products," said Peter Hajek, at

"Although a large number of smokers report that they have quit successfully with the help of e-cigarettes, health professionals have been reluctant to recommend their use because of the lack of clear evidence from randomised controlled trials. This is now likely to change," Hajek added.

The new study, which was set-up to test the long-term efficacy of newer refillable e-cigarettes compared with a range of nicotine replacement treatments, was conducted among 886 smokers who attended stop services.

In addition to e-cigarettes being almost twice as effective, the researchers found that e-participants reported greater decline in incidence of and phlegm production after 52 weeks.

But e-participants reported more (65.4 per cent vs 50.8 per cent) and nicotine replacement participants reported more (37.8 per cent vs 31.4 per cent), the results showed.

"This is the first study to show the effectiveness of e-cigarettes combined with behavioural support for giving up smoking, and the results are extremely positive," said of Britain-based charity

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(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sun, February 10 2019. 10:14 IST