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Supplementary information files for "The association of cigarette smoking with appetite, appetite-related hormones and food reward: a matched-pair cohort study"

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posted on 2025-06-27, 13:26 authored by Arwa Alruwaili, Ridah Nayeemullah, Buket Engin, Sundus Malaikah, James SandersJames Sanders, Lynsey JamesLynsey James, David Thivel, Alice ThackrayAlice Thackray, David StenselDavid Stensel, James KingJames King, Scott WillisScott Willis

Supplementary files for article "The association of cigarette smoking with appetite, appetite-related hormones and food reward: a matched-pair cohort study"

This study examined associations of cigarette smoking with appetite perceptions, appetite-related hormones, foodpreferences and eating traits. In a cross-sectional matched-pair cohort design, 25 participants who smoke cigarettes and25 who do not were matched 1:1 by age, sex, ethnicity, and BMI. Across two visits, participants’ food preferences (Leeds Food Preference Questionnaire), cravings (Control of Eating Questionnaire), and eating traits (Three-Factor Eating Questionnaire) were assessed. Fasting and postprandial appetite perceptions (visual analogue scales) were also assessed during a 4-h mixed-meal tolerance test (MM-TT), while fasting leptin and fasting and postprandial acylated ghrelin and total peptide-YY (PYY) were measured for 2 h postprandially. Group differences in study outcomes were analysed using generalised linear models. After adjustment (age and BMI), explicit liking and wanting for high-fat foods and cravings for savoury foods were higher in participants who smoke versus those who do not (P≤0.065; d≥0.52). Cognitive restraint was lower, while disinhibition was higher in participants who smoke compared to those who do not (P≤0.014; d≥0.69). Smoking was also associated with lower fasting acylated ghrelin and lower postprandial total PYY (P≤0.041; d≥0.58), whereas fasting leptin was similar between groups (P=0.821; d=0.06). Additionally, participants who smoke had higher fasting perceived fullness (P=0.021; d=0.65), while no other fasting or postprandial differences were identified for other appetite perceptions (hunger, prospective food consumption, satisfaction; P≥0.373; d≤0.25). In conclusion, cigarette smoking is associated with altered food preferences and less favourable eating traits, while more subtle differences may exist in appetite perceptions and appetite-related hormones.

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