Comparable sensitivities of urine cotinine and breath carbon monoxide at follow-up time points of three months or more in a smoking cessation trial

Pharmacology. 2010;85(4):234-40. doi: 10.1159/000280435. Epub 2010 Mar 17.

Abstract

To control for likely overreporting of abstinence in clinical trials of smoking cessation aids, field convention demands the corroboration of subjects' self-reports by a biochemical/pharmacological marker. It is, however, currently debated if urinary cotinine (UC), a metabolite of nicotine, should be preferred because of its higher sensitivity, although sample collection for and analysis of cotinine are much more expensive and work intensive than carbon monoxide (CO) measurements in exhaled air. In the present study, it turned out that UC was of only moderately higher sensitivity than CO (99.4% vs. 96.3%; p = 0.02), the difference being significant only at group sizes of >164. UC identified participants as smokers who escaped CO detection in 4.9% of the cases, whereas CO identified smokers who escaped UC detection in 2.7% of the cases (p = 0.014). Our findings suggest that the costs/disadvantages of using UC instead of CO may outweigh its benefit as a pharmacological marker of (non)smoking status.

Publication types

  • Comparative Study
  • Randomized Controlled Trial
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Breath Tests
  • Carbon Monoxide / analysis*
  • Cotinine / blood*
  • False Negative Reactions
  • Humans
  • Patient Compliance
  • Sensitivity and Specificity
  • Smoking / metabolism
  • Smoking / urine
  • Smoking Cessation*
  • Time Factors

Substances

  • Carbon Monoxide
  • Cotinine