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Validating Wave 1 (2014) Urinary Cotinine and TNE-2 Cut-points for Differentiating Wave 4 (2017) Cigarette Use from Non-use in the United States Using Data from the PATH Study

  • Kathryn C. Edwards
  • , Asia Khan
  • , Eva Sharma
  • , Lanqing Wang
  • , June Feng
  • , Benjamin C. Blount
  • , Connie S. Sosnoff
  • , Danielle M. Smith
  • , Maciej L. Goniewicz
  • , Jennifer Pearson
  • , Andrea C. Villanti
  • , Cristine D. Delnevo
  • , Michelle T. Bover-Manderski
  • , Dorothy K. Hatsukami
  • , Raymond Niaura
  • , Colm Everard
  • , Heather L. Kimmel
  • , Kara Duffy
  • , Brian L. Rostron
  • , Arseima Y. Del Valle-Pinero
  • Dana M. van Bemmel, Cassandra A. Stanton, Andrew Hyland

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background: Sex and racial/ethnic identity-specific cut-points for validating tobacco use using Wave 1 (W1) of the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) Study were published in 2020. The current study establishes predictive validity of the W1 (2014) urinary cotinine and total nicotine equivalents- 2 (TNE-2) cut-points on estimating Wave 4 (W4; 2017) tobacco use. Methods: For exclusive and polytobacco cigarette use, weighted prevalence estimates based on W4 self-report alone and with exceeding the W1 cut-point were calculated to identify the percentage missed without biochemical verification. Sensitivity and specificity of W1 cut-points on W4 self-reported tobacco use status were examined.ROCcurves were used to determine the optimalW4 cut-points to distinguish past 30-day users from non-users, and evaluate whether the cut-points significantly differed from W1. Results: Agreement betweenW4self-reported use and exceeding the W1 cut-points was high overall and when stratified by demographic subgroups (0.7%-4.4% of use was missed if relying on selfreport alone). The predictive validity of using the W1 cut-points to classify exclusive cigarette and polytobacco cigarette use at W4 was high (>90% sensitivity and specificity, except among polytobacco Hispanic smokers). Cut-points derived using W4 data did not significantly differ from the W1-derived cut-points [e.g., W1 exclusive =40.5 ng/mL cotinine (95% confidence interval, CI: 26.1-62.8), W4 exclusive = 29.9 ng/mL cotinine (95% CI: 13.5-66.4)], among most demographic subgroups. Conclusions: The W1 cut-points remain valid for biochemical verification of self-reported tobacco use in W4.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1233-1241
Number of pages9
JournalCancer Epidemiology Biomarkers and Prevention
Volume32
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 1 2023

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • General Medicine

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