Depression, Cannabis, Binge Drinking May Promote Relapse in Ex-Smokers

August 21, 2019

The prevalence of depression, cannabis use, and alcohol abuse increased among former smokers from 2005 to 2016 in the U.S., according to a new study published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine. Therefore, increases in these risk factors for relapse among former smokers could threaten progress in reducing the prevalence of cigarette use. This is the first national U.S. study to focus on the prevalence and time trends of depression, marijuana use, and problematic alcohol use among former smokers.

“It’s good news that as tobacco control efforts have been successful at reducing smoking, the proportion of former smokers among the U.S. population is increasing. However, as our study demonstrates, more of them are now suffering from depression and engaging in problematic substance use,” said lead investigator Renee D. Goodwin, PhD, Department of Epidemiology at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, and the Institute for Implementation Science in Population Health, CUNY.

Conducted in 2018-9, the study investigated the prevalence of depression, cannabis use, and alcohol misuse among former smokers ages 18 and older in the U.S. from 2005 to 2016. Data were drawn from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health, an annual, nationally representative cross-sectional study. More than 67,000 individuals, aged 18 and over, participated.

During the study period, the incidence of major depression increased from 4.88 percent to 6.04 percent; prior-year cannabis use rose from 5.35 percent to 10.09 percent; and prior-month binge drinking went up from 17.22 percent to 22.33 percent.

The legalization of cannabis, decreasing perception of risk associated with use, and reduced stigma related to the same may have been a factor in the findings since the drug is sometimes used by smokers to try and quit tobacco. However, the investigators note that when former smokers use cannabis, they increase their likelihood of returning to tobacco.

The results also show that the profile of former smokers has changed over the study period: An increasing percentage of the U.S. population who were ever smokers no longer smoke (50 percent in 2016, compared to 44 percent in 2002). Former smokers are slightly more likely to be male than female, married, and of non-Hispanic white ethnicity. In 2016 compared to 2002, former smokers were more likely to be older than 65, never married, have some college education and incomes over $75,000 a year. More than half of them had also quit smoking for three years or more. 

“Because previous research has demonstrated that [depression, cannabis use, and alcohol] put former smokers at greater risk of relapsing with tobacco—and relapse is a risk that lingers for decades—our study should signal an alarm for public health leaders and healthcare providers. The findings represent a looming threat to the progress that has been made in reducing the prevalence of cigarette use,” cautioned Goodwin, who is also a professor of Biostatistics at the Graduate School of Public Health and Health Policy, CUNY.

Goodwin noted that the findings should have bearing on ongoing tobacco-control policy decisions, “Since it has been shown that depression and substance use may compromise abstinence, anyone designing community-based public information campaigns and engaged in clinical interactions with former smokers should be made aware that modifiable predictors of relapse are increasing among former smokers. As such, screening for these issues and referral to treatment should be high priorities. These are important steps for assuring growing and sustained abstinence among the U.S. population, a trend with significant health and societal benefits.”

Co-authors are Keely Cheslack-Postava, Columbia University Irving Medical Center; Melanie Wall, Columbia Mailman School of Public Health; and Andrea Weinberger, CUNY. The study was funded by NIH/NIDA (DA20892).