OBJECTIVE: To assess a "stage-of-change" oriented smoking cessation intervention for infertile and pregnant women, compared with standard of care. DESIGN: Randomized controlled trial. SETTING:Three university teaching hospitals in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. PATIENT(S): Infertile women at their first visit to a tertiary referral infertility clinic (n = 94) and new patients seeking pre-natal care (n = 110) who had smoked >/= 3 cigarettes in the past six months. INTERVENTION(S): A three to five minute scripted intervention and booklet specific to the woman's "stage-of-change" in the smoking continuum, versus standard of care. Exhaled carbon-monoxide (CO) monitoring was used to validate exposure in both groups. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Delta "stage-of-change" and rate of maintained cessation at 12 months post follow-up. RESULT(S): Intervention and control were similarly effective for infertile women: the rate of maintained cessation rose significantly from 4% to 24% over twelve months, with a mean delta "stage-of-change" 0.28. In prenatal women, neither approach was effective. Maintained cessation did not significantly change from 0 to 12 months (19% to 18%). Mean delta "stage-of-change" declined by -0.62. CONCLUSION(S): For infertile women, basic information describing the impact of smoking on fertility, along with exhaled CO monitoring and a more intensive intervention were both highly effective. In pregnant women neither approach was beneficial, with some evidence of post-partum relapse.
RCT Entities:
OBJECTIVE: To assess a "stage-of-change" oriented smoking cessation intervention for infertile and pregnant women, compared with standard of care. DESIGN: Randomized controlled trial. SETTING: Three university teaching hospitals in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. PATIENT(S): Infertilewomen at their first visit to a tertiary referral infertility clinic (n = 94) and new patients seeking pre-natal care (n = 110) who had smoked >/= 3 cigarettes in the past six months. INTERVENTION(S): A three to five minute scripted intervention and booklet specific to the woman's "stage-of-change" in the smoking continuum, versus standard of care. Exhaled carbon-monoxide (CO) monitoring was used to validate exposure in both groups. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Delta "stage-of-change" and rate of maintained cessation at 12 months post follow-up. RESULT(S): Intervention and control were similarly effective for infertilewomen: the rate of maintained cessation rose significantly from 4% to 24% over twelve months, with a mean delta "stage-of-change" 0.28. In prenatal women, neither approach was effective. Maintained cessation did not significantly change from 0 to 12 months (19% to 18%). Mean delta "stage-of-change" declined by -0.62. CONCLUSION(S): For infertilewomen, basic information describing the impact of smoking on fertility, along with exhaled CO monitoring and a more intensive intervention were both highly effective. In pregnant women neither approach was beneficial, with some evidence of post-partum relapse.
Authors: Alex J Polotsky; Amanda A Allshouse; Peter R Casson; Christos Coutifaris; Michael P Diamond; Gregory M Christman; William D Schlaff; Ruben Alvero; J C Trussell; Stephen A Krawetz; Nanette Santoro; Esther Eisenberg; Heping Zhang; Richard S Legro Journal: J Clin Endocrinol Metab Date: 2015-04-09 Impact factor: 5.958
Authors: Linda Bullock; Kevin D Everett; Patricia Dolan Mullen; Elizabeth Geden; Daniel R Longo; Richard Madsen Journal: Matern Child Health J Date: 2008-05-22
Authors: Richard S Legro; Gang Chen; Allen R Kunselman; William D Schlaff; Michael P Diamond; Christos Coutifaris; Sandra A Carson; Michael P Steinkampf; Bruce R Carr; Peter G McGovern; Nicholas A Cataldo; Gabriella G Gosman; John E Nestler; Evan R Myers; Heping Zhang; Jonathan Foulds Journal: Hum Reprod Date: 2014-10-16 Impact factor: 6.918
Authors: Catherine Chamberlain; Alison O'Mara-Eves; Sandy Oliver; Jenny R Caird; Susan M Perlen; Sandra J Eades; James Thomas Journal: Cochrane Database Syst Rev Date: 2013-10-23