To obtain reliable information on nicotine and drug use through a population-based study, the prevalence of nicotine use in deceased young adults was studied in the Finnish postmortem toxicology database for a 3-year period. The nicotine user and non-nicotine user groups were compared by alcohol, drug, and drug-of-abuse findings and by the manner of death.
Nicotine users were identified based on detection of nicotine, cotinine, and/or trans-3'-hydroxycotinine in urine from a population-based sample of deceased young adults aged 15-34 years at the time of death (n = 1,623, ~60% of all fatalities). Background information from case referrals was used to distinguish the abuse of medicines from their therapeutic use. The manner of death was taken from death certificates.
Nicotine use was more common in young adults (75%) than among all cases in the database (55%). There were twice as many ethanol-positive cases in nicotine users (60%) than in non-nicotine users (30%). Nicotine use was common (70%-79%) among individuals on antipsychotics, antidepressants, anxiolytics, and/or hypnotics and sedatives. The proportion of nicotine users was also high among the drugs-of-abuse positive cases (85%). There were fewer deaths that were classified as natural in the nicotine users group.
Among deceased young adults, nicotine use was two to three times as common as has been estimated for the corresponding living population (20%-30%). Nicotine use was also strongly associated with substance abuse and mental illnesses requiring pharmacotherapy. This group of young adults usually cannot be reached by traditional health surveys.