Initial Validation of Oral Nicotine Pouch Purchase Tasks in a Crowdsourced Sample of Adult Pouch Consumers

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Introduction: Oral nicotine pouches are rapidly proliferating in the market. While pouches may be a harm reduction option, these products may appeal to adolescents and may elicit greater nicotine exposure. Behavioral economics provides a framework for studying the reinforcing value of these products; however, there are no validated measures for assessing demand for nicotine pouches.Aims and Methods: This study evaluated behavioral economic purchase tasks for nicotine pouches. Crowdsourced data were collected from 228 adult pouch consumers (40% women; age, M(SD)=31.1(11.9); past-month pouch use, M(SD)= 15.4(8.1) days; Fagerström Test for Nicotine Dependence-Smokeless Tobacco Version, M(SD)=4.7(2.4). Participants completed two hypothetical purchase tasks with the products available as individual pouches (free—$5/pouch) or tins containing 20 pouches each (free—$100/tin). Results: Task responding was prototypical with a similar percentage of nonsystematic data across versions. Participants consumed approximately 35 tins or 73 pouches when products were free (intensity), spent a total of $206 on tins or $43 on pouches (Omax), and had a breakpoint of $4/pouch or $56/tin. Observed and derived metrics exhibited expected within-task intercorrelations. Demand for tins was significantly correlated with dependence (rs =.29-46, ps<.005), while correlations for pouches were less consistent. Conclusions: This proof-of-concept study provides initial validation of two versions of nicotine pouch purchase tasks. Data preliminarily indicate that a tins version may be more sensitive to dependence severity. In contrast, the pouch version may be important for studies of state-based influences on demand.

Article activity feed