# Feasibility and Engagement of a Peer-Driven Mobile Intervention for Adolescent E-Cigarette Cessation: Cluster Randomized Pilot Study

**Authors:** Rajani Shankar Sadasivam, Elise M Stevens, Jessica Wijesundara, Bo Wang, Kavitha Balakrishnan, Reem Najjar, Christine Frisard, Narayani Ballambat, Lori Pbert

PMC · DOI: 10.2196/79667 · JMIR Formative Research · 2026-03-17

## TL;DR

A peer-driven mobile texting program for teens trying to quit vaping was tested and found to be feasible and engaging, though not significantly more effective than a control group.

## Contribution

This study introduces and evaluates a novel peer-driven mobile intervention for adolescent e-cigarette cessation.

## Key findings

- The V2V intervention achieved high engagement with peer messaging and gamification components.
- Participants showed high satisfaction and retention rates, with a 96% follow-up rate at 3 months.
- There were nonsignificant improvements in confidence to quit and vaping frequency in the intervention group.

## Abstract

E-cigarette use remains prevalent among US adolescents, with many reporting daily use and high nicotine dependence. Few evidence-based mobile health interventions focus specifically on adolescents.

This study aimed to evaluate the feasibility, engagement, and preliminary efficacy of vaper-to-vaper (V2V)—a multicomponent, peer-driven texting intervention supporting adolescent e-cigarette cessation.

A cluster randomized pilot study was conducted in 5 Massachusetts high schools, with schools randomized to either the V2V texting intervention (n=3) or a control group (n=2) that received a link to the National Cancer Institute’s Smokefree.gov Quit Vaping website. The V2V intervention included four components: (1) peer-written messages provided motivation, tips, and strategies to support adolescents in quitting vaping, sent daily in the first 30 days; (2) peer videos featuring adolescents sharing their experiences with e-cigarettes and motivations to quit, sent regularly as links aligned with related peer message topics; (3) peer coaches—university students aged younger than 22 years who had successfully quit vaping—trained to provide support, encouragement and answers to participants’ questions through the texting platform; and (4) a fictional, gamified mystery story integrated into the texting platform to promote engagement. Each gamified message included a short story segment and a question, with the next segment unlocked after a response or automatically after 3 days. The intervention was mainly delivered over 30 days, but adolescents could message the peer coach over the 3 months. Eligible participants (grades 9‐12, current e-cigarette users) were followed for 3 months. We assessed the feasibility of recruitment and retention (target: 80 participants, ≥85% retention), engagement with intervention components, and participant satisfaction. The secondary outcomes included improvements from baseline in confidence to quit, self-efficacy to resist vaping in specific high-risk situations, and fewer days vaped. E-cigarette cessation was biochemically verified using the Abbott iScreen cotinine test.

Seventy-one adolescents enrolled (intervention: 39/71, 55% ; control: 32/71, 45%), with a 96% follow-up rate at 3 months. Among intervention participants who responded to engagement items (N=37), high engagement—defined as self-reported use always, usually, or about half the time—was highest for peer messaging (n=29, 78%), followed by gamification (n=18, 49%), peer coaching (n=18, 49%), and peer video (n=13, 35%). The intervention group showed nonsignificant improvements in confidence to quit (n=17, 46%, vs n=9, 24%, moved from not at all, somewhat, or moderately confident to very or extremely confident) and in the number of days vaped in the past 30 days (−3.6 vs −2.9), while self-efficacy scores (adapted smoking self-efficacy scale range 12‐60) were slightly lower compared to the control group (mean −0.21, SD 1.14, vs mean 0.06, SD 1.39). Cotinine-validated 7-day point prevalence abstinence was similar between groups (intervention: 21.6% vs control: 22.6%).

The V2V intervention demonstrated feasibility and acceptability, with strong engagement and high satisfaction. Although differences between groups were not statistically significant, findings suggest that peer-driven mobile interventions are a promising approach to support adolescent e-cigarette cessation.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Cancer (MESH:D009369), CF (MESH:D003550), suicidal ideation (MESH:D001072), HIV or STI (MESH:D012749), nicotine dependence (MESH:D014029), anxiety (MESH:D001007), COVID-19 (MESH:D000086382), RSS (MESH:D056730), Vaping Abstinence (MESH:D009357), Depression (MESH:D003866), difficulties with concentration and mood (MESH:D019964), Drug Abuse (MESH:D019966)
- **Chemicals:** THC (MESH:D013759), e- (MESH:D004540), Cotinine (MESH:D003367), V2V (-), nicotine (MESH:D009538)
- **Species:** Nicotiana tabacum (American tobacco, species) [taxon 4097], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

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## References

52 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12994880/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12994880