March 21, 2022

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Study reveals consumer interest in 'nicotine pouches'

Nicotine pouches. Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain
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Nicotine pouches. Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

Consumer interest and awareness in nicotine pouches is growing. These are products that contain nicotine but have no tobacco, and they are most popular among younger smokers and those trying to quit, according to a Rutgers research study.

The study, the first independent analysis assessing consumer awareness and interest in pouches among U.S. smokers, appears in the journal Tobacco Control.

"Considering the outsize impact of products on health, we knew it would be essential to track these little-known products and come to understand them better," said Mary Hrywna, an assistant professor at Rutgers Biomedical Health Sciences' Center for Tobacco Studies. "With sales growing exponentially, it's important to know who is using these products, how they are using them and what the potential may be for them to keep using them."

The relatively new product works after users insert the pouches between their upper lip and gum, where the nicotine and flavor are released. Sales of the nicotine pouches, which became widely distributed between 2019 and 2020, are accelerating through brands such as the Altria subsidiary Helix Innovations' On! and Swedish Match's Zyn, according to industry projections.

In the Rutgers study, researchers queried 1,018 smokers in the United States about their knowledge of nicotine pouches, whether they had tried them and if they planned to continue. The findings showed:

The industry has conducted most studies on use and safety of nicotine pouches, Hrywna said, so more independent studies are needed to determine whether nicotine pouches are used to reduce harm and if limiting the use of e-cigarettes through government regulations is driving some smokers to use nicotine pouches.

"It was also notable to find that smokers in our study expressed much more interest in using these nicotine products in the future than in using other traditional forms of smokeless tobacco, such as moist snuff and snus," said study co-author Olivia Wackowski, an associate professor at the Rutgers Center for Tobacco Studies and Rutgers School of Public Health.

"This is a really timely issue," said Hrywna, who also teaches in the Department of Health Behavior, Society & Policy in the Rutgers School of Public Health. "We have now learned from our study that interest will continue to grow in these , so we will need more independent research on the product itself."

More information: Mary Hrywna et al, Nicotine pouch product awareness, interest and ever use among US adults who smoke, 2021, Tobacco Control (2022). DOI: 10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2021-057156

Journal information: Tobacco Control

Provided by Rutgers University

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