Identifying determinants of smoking cessation is critical for developing optimal cessation treatments and interventions. Machine learning (ML) is becoming more prevalent for smoking cessation success prediction in treatment programs. However, only individuals with an intention to quit smoking cigarettes participate in such programs, which limits the generalizability of the results. This study applies data from the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH), a United States longitudinal nationally representative survey, to select primary determinants of smoking cessation and to train ML classification models for predicting smoking cessation among the general population. An analytical sample of 9,281 adult current established smokers from the PATH survey wave 1 was used to develop classification models to predict smoking cessation by wave 2. Random forest and gradient boosting machines were applied for variable selection, and the SHapley Additive explanation method was used to show the effect direction of the top-ranked variables. The final model predicted wave 2 smoking cessation for current established smokers in wave 1 with an accuracy of 72% in the test dataset. The validation results showed that a similar model could predict wave 3 smoking cessation of wave 2 smokers with an accuracy of 70%. Our analysis indicated that more past 30 days e-cigarette use at the time of quitting, fewer past 30 days cigarette use before quitting, ages older than 18 at smoking initiation, fewer years of smoking, poly tobacco past 30-days use before quitting, and higher BMI resulted in higher chances of cigarette cessation for adult smokers in the US.
Oxidative stress and inflammation: elucidating mechanisms of
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Awareness, current use, and reasons for current use of EC and HTP
Oxidative stress and inflammation: elucidating mechanisms of
Evaluation results of the prediction models among men.
Oxidative stress and inflammation: elucidating mechanisms of
Decision trees using the training cohort outcomes (CO or Cotinine
The roadmap for statistical analyses to evaluate the association
Adjusted associations between smoking relapse and the proportion
PDF) A Machine-Learning Approach to Predicting Smoking Cessation
Cigarette Discontinuation and Discontinuing Daily Cigarette
Adjusted associations between smoking cessation and the proportion
David Mendez's research works University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
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Results of the bankruptcy prediction framework for Korean dataset