Modelling nicotine pharmacokinetic profile for e-cigarette using real time monitoring of consumer’s physiological measurements and mouth level exposure

Krishna Prasad, Allen Griffiths, Kavya Agrawal,Michael McEwan, Flavio Macci, Marco Ghisoni, Matthew Stopher, Matthew Napleton, Joel Strickland, David Keating,Thomas Whitehead,Gareth Conduit, Stacey Murray,Lauren Edward

Research Square (Research Square)(2023)

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Abstract
AbstractPharmacokinetic (PK) studies can provide essential information on abuse liability of nicotine and tobacco products but are intrusive and must be conducted in a clinical environment. The objective of the study was to explore whether changes in plasma nicotine levels following use of an e-cigarette can be predicted from real time monitoring of physiological parameters and mouth level exposure (MLE) to nicotine before, during, and after e-cigarette vaping, using wearable devices. Such an approach would allow an -effective pre-screening process, reducing the number of clinical studies, reducing the number of products to be tested and the number of blood draws required in a clinical PK study Establishing such a prediction model might facilitate the longitudinal collection of data on product use and nicotine expression among consumers using nicotine products in their normal environments, thereby reducing the need for intrusive clinical studies while generating PK data related to product use in the real world. A machine learning model was developed to predict changes in plasma nicotine levels following the use of an e-cigarette; from real time monitoring of physiological parameters and MLE to nicotine before, during, and after e-cigarette vaping. This preliminary study identified key parameters, such as heart rate (HR), heart rate variability (HRV), and physiological stress (PS) that may act as a predictors for an individual’s plasma nicotine response (PK curve). Relative to baseline measurements (per participant), HR showed a significant increase for nicotine containing e-liquids and was consistent across sessions (intraparticipant). Imputing missing values and training the model on all data resulted in 57% improvement from the original ’learning’ data and achieved a median validation R2of 0.70.
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