Danielle E McCarthy1, Lemma Ebssa2, Katie Witkiewitz3, Saul Shiffman4. 1. Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, Department of Psychology and Institute for Health, Health Care Policy and Aging Research, 112 Paterson St., New Brunswick, NJ 08901, USA. Electronic address: demccart@rci.rutgers.edu. 2. Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, Department of Psychology and Institute for Health, Health Care Policy and Aging Research, 112 Paterson St., New Brunswick, NJ 08901, USA. Electronic address: lemma@rci.rutgers.edu. 3. Department of Psychology and Center on Alcoholism, Substance Abuse, and Addictions, University of New Mexico, 2650 Yale Blvd SE, MSC 11-6280, Albuquerque, NM 87106, USA. Electronic address: katiew@unm.edu. 4. University of Pittsburgh, Department of Psychology, Bellefield Professional Building, 130N. Bellefield Ave., Pittsburgh, PA 15260-2695, USA. Electronic address: shiffman@pinneyassociates.com.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Person-centered approaches to the study of behavior change, such as repeated measures latent class analysis (RMLCA), can be used to identify patterns of change and link these to later behavior change outcomes. METHODS: Daily smoking status data from three smoking cessation studies (N=287, N=334, and N=403) were submitted to RMLCA to identify latent classes of smokers based on patterns of abstinence across the first 27days of a quit attempt. Three-month biochemically verified abstinence rates were compared among latent classes with particular patterns of smoking across days. Pharmacotherapy variables and baseline individual differences were added as covariates of latent class membership. RESULTS: Results of separate and pooled analyses supported a five-class solution that replicated across studies. Latent classes included a large class that achieved immediate stable abstinence, a smaller class of cessation failures, and three classes with partial abstinence that increased, decreased, or remained stable over time. Three-month point-prevalence abstinence rates varied among the latent classes, with 38-55% abstinent among early quitters, 3-20% abstinent among those who smoked intermittently throughout the first 27days, and fewer than 5% abstinent in the classes marked by little or delayed change in smoking. High-dose nicotine patch and bupropion promoted membership in abstinent classes. Demographics, nicotine dependence, and craving were related to latent class in multiple studies and pooled analyses. CONCLUSIONS: We identified five patterns of smoking behavior in the first weeks of a smoking cessation attempt. These patterns are robust across multiple studies and are related to later point-prevalence abstinence rates.
BACKGROUND:Person-centered approaches to the study of behavior change, such as repeated measures latent class analysis (RMLCA), can be used to identify patterns of change and link these to later behavior change outcomes. METHODS: Daily smoking status data from three smoking cessation studies (N=287, N=334, and N=403) were submitted to RMLCA to identify latent classes of smokers based on patterns of abstinence across the first 27days of a quit attempt. Three-month biochemically verified abstinence rates were compared among latent classes with particular patterns of smoking across days. Pharmacotherapy variables and baseline individual differences were added as covariates of latent class membership. RESULTS: Results of separate and pooled analyses supported a five-class solution that replicated across studies. Latent classes included a large class that achieved immediate stable abstinence, a smaller class of cessation failures, and three classes with partial abstinence that increased, decreased, or remained stable over time. Three-month point-prevalence abstinence rates varied among the latent classes, with 38-55% abstinent among early quitters, 3-20% abstinent among those who smoked intermittently throughout the first 27days, and fewer than 5% abstinent in the classes marked by little or delayed change in smoking. High-dose nicotine patch and bupropion promoted membership in abstinent classes. Demographics, nicotine dependence, and craving were related to latent class in multiple studies and pooled analyses. CONCLUSIONS: We identified five patterns of smoking behavior in the first weeks of a smoking cessation attempt. These patterns are robust across multiple studies and are related to later point-prevalence abstinence rates.
Authors: Megan E Piper; Stevens S Smith; Tanya R Schlam; Michael C Fiore; Douglas E Jorenby; David Fraser; Timothy B Baker Journal: Arch Gen Psychiatry Date: 2009-11
Authors: Lorra Garey; Kara Manning; Danielle E McCarthy; Matthew W Gallagher; Justin M Shepherd; Michael F Orr; Norman B Schmidt; Blaz Rodic; Michael J Zvolensky Journal: Addict Behav Date: 2019-02-21 Impact factor: 3.913
Authors: Catherine R Marinac; Mirja Quante; Sara Mariani; Jia Weng; Susan Redline; Elizabeth M Cespedes Feliciano; J Aaron Hipp; Daniel Wang; Emily R Kaplan; Peter James; Jonathan A Mitchell Journal: J Phys Act Health Date: 2019-02-24
Authors: Lorenzo Zamboni; Igor Portoghese; Alessio Congiu; Thomas Zandonai; Rebecca Casari; Francesca Fusina; Anna Bertoldi; Fabio Lugoboni Journal: Front Psychiatry Date: 2022-01-25 Impact factor: 4.157