| Literature DB >> 27650767 |
Kristen McCarter1, Úrsula Martínez2, Ben Britton3, Amanda Baker3, Billie Bonevski3, Gregory Carter3, Alison Beck3, Chris Wratten4, Ashleigh Guillaumier3, Sean A Halpin1, Luke Wolfenden3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To examine the effectiveness of smoking cessation interventions in improving cessation rates and smoking related behaviour in patients with head and neck cancer (HNC).Entities:
Keywords: review; smoking cessation
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27650767 PMCID: PMC5051538 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-012296
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692

Trial characteristics
| Author year (Ref) | Study type | Study dates | Single-centre or multicentre | Setting | Country | Aim | Inclusion criteria | Number of patients at start of intervention | Mean age (years) | Gender M (%) | Tumour site/tumour stage | Cancer treatment type/stage of treatment | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Duffy | RCT | 2000–2003 | Multi (4 hospitals) | ENT clinic, telephone. 4 hospitals including the University of Michigan Medical Center and 3 VA hospitals in Ann Arbor, MI, Gainesville, FL, and Dallas, TX | USA | To develop and test a tailored intervention for patients with HNC that included CBT, nicotine replacement therapy, and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor management for smoking, alcohol use and depression | Patients with HNC from the time of diagnosis and thereafter who: (1) screened positive for 1 or more of the 3 health problems of smoking, alcohol and depression; (2) were not pregnant; and, (3) were >18 years of age | 184 (91 UC; 93 I) | 57 years (9.9 SD) | 84 | Larynx 33%, oropharynx/hypopharynx 30%, oral cavity/other 37% stage 0, I or II 39%, stage III, IV 61% | NR/both new and post-treatment | |
| Gosselin | Quasi-experimental design | UC group patients recruited between: May 2007 and June 2007; EC group patients recruited between: July 2007 and August 2007 | Multi (2 clinics) | Dental/maxillofacial or head and neck clinic, telephone. Roswell Park Cancer Institute (Buffalo, NY) | USA | To evaluate the effectiveness of a brief staff training programme on improving the delivery of tobacco cessation services to patients with head and neck cancers | Current tobacco users (ie, cigarettes, cigar, pipe, smokeless/chewing tobacco or some other type of tobacco) | 179 (98 UC; 81 EC) | 55.8% in 53–60 years quartile | 86.8 | NR/NR | NR/new and established patients | |
| Gritz | RCT | NR | Multi (10 clinics) | Clinic. | USA | Assess the efficacy of a provider-delivered smoking cessation intervention for patients with head and neck cancer | Adult (over 18 years of age) patients with newly diagnosed squamous cell carcinomas of the head and neck who met the following criteria: (1) life expectancy of more than 1 year; (2) tobacco use within the past year; (3) absence of gross psychopathology; (4) medical follow-up by local providers; (5) English speaking and reading; and (6) agreement to undergo treatment. | 186 (92 UC; 94 I) | 58.5 years | 73.7 | Oral | Radiation only 28.5% (n=53), total laryngectomies 24.7% (n=46), surgeries other than total laryngectomy which may have been followed by radiation 46.8% (n=87)/spanned pretreatment to post-treatment | |
CA, California; CBT, cognitive–behaviour therapy; EC, enhanced cessation; ENT, ear, nose and throat; FL, Florida; HNC, head and neck cancer; I, intervention; MI, Michigan; NR, not reported; NY, New York; RCT, randomised controlled trial; TX, Texas; UC, usual care; UCLA, The University of California, Los Angeles; VA, Veterans Affairs.
Intervention description
| Description | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Intervention | |||
| Non-pharmacological | Pharmacological | Control | |
| Duffy | Nurse administered. CBT workbook, CBT telephone counselling (9–11 sessions) | Those who smoked were offered nicotine replacement therapy and/or bupropion, and those with depression were offered antidepressants. | Enhanced usual care; referred as needed for smoking cessation, and/or alcohol treatment, and/or psychiatric evaluation. Handout for local, state and national resources tailored to each study site |
| Gosselin | Nurse and physician administered. Inquired about tobacco use, advised patients to quit, and offered assistance to tobacco users interested in quitting. | Prescription of stop smoking medication for eligible patients; varenicline and bupropion | Usual care; standard tobacco cessation practices administered by health providers with regard to asking patients about their tobacco use status or providing assistance to quit smoking at Roswell Park Cancer Institute |
| Gritz | Delivered by head and neck surgeons or maxillofacial prosthodontists. Enhanced initial advice (supplemented the usual care advice with a discussion of the participant's receptivity to quitting; a statement of confidence in the participant's ability to stop; presentation of 3 self-help booklets; a discussion of tobacco withdrawal; a discussion to determine a target quit date, including joint signature of the quit-smoking contract; and an affirmation of continuing provider support during follow-up care) session augmented by 6 booster sessions. | Usual care; standardised advice consisting of information on the risks of continued smoking and the benefits of cessation for patients with head and neck cancer. No guidelines regarding additional advice sessions; providers were free to follow their usual practice regarding discussing patient smoking practices. | |
CBT, cognitive–behaviour therapy.
Ratings of methodological quality: strong, moderate and weak
| Selection bias | Study design | Confounders | Blinding | Data collection | Withdrawals | Global rating | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Duffy | Weak | Strong | Strong | Moderate | Weak | Strong | Weak |
| 2. Gosselin | Moderate | Strong | Weak | Moderate | Weak | Moderate | Weak |
| 3. Gritz | Moderate | Strong | Strong | Weak | Strong | Moderate | Moderate |
Tobacco smoking cessation characteristics
| Primary outcome | Secondary outcomes | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Author year (Ref) | Number of patients at start of intervention | Current smokers at baseline; outcome measure | Usual care (number of patients) at follow-up | Intervention (number of patients) at follow-up | Description and follow-up interval | Results | Description and follow-up interval | Results |
| Duffy | 184 (91 UC; 93 I) | 148 (68 UC; 80 I); self-report (smoked in the past 6 months) | 62/68 (91 including those not ‘smokers’ at baseline) | 74/80 (93 including those not ‘smokers’ at baseline) | Self-reported smoking status (patients asked if they were currently smoking); 6 months postintervention | χ2 tests of association using ITT analysis: significant difference in smoking cessation with 47% (35/74) quitting in the intervention group vs 31% (19/62) quitting in the usual care group (p<0.05) | Subgroup analyses: self-reported smoking cessation rates; 6 months postintervention | Smoking cessation rates for only those smokers with comorbid depression and/or alcohol (omitting those who smoked only; n=101); the quit rates remained higher in the intervention group (48%) compared with the usual care group (26%; p<0.05). |
| Gosselin | 179 (98 UC; 81 EC) | 179 (98 UC; 81 EC); self-report current tobacco use (105 cigarettes, 2 cigars, 1 pipe, 1 chew) | 60/98 | 52/81 | Self-reported smoking status (patients asked if they were currently smoking); 1-month postintervention | χ2 statistic was used to evaluate differences between the EC and UC groups on smoking behaviour reported. | Self-reported quit attempt (those who reported that they were currently smoking were subsequently asked whether or not they had made any attempt to stop smoking during the past month); 1-month follow-up postintervention | χ2 statistic was used to evaluate differences between the EC and UC groups on smoking behaviour reported. Quit attempts at 1-month: I, 56% vs UC, 55% (NS) |
| Gritz | 186 (94 UC; 92 I) | 164; self-report (currently smoking or stopped smoking <1 month prior to the baseline interview | 56/92 | 58/94 | Smoking cessation; ever quit (abstinent for 48 consecutive hours or longer at any time during the 12-month follow-up postintervention period after receiving initial smoking cessation advice) | No significant differences between intervention and control at any follow-up on any of the 3 smoking cessation outcomes. I, 80% vs 79.8% at 1 month (NS). I, 84.3% vs UC, 82.6% at 6 months (NS). I, 91.4% vs UC, 89.3% at 12 months (NS). I, 69.4% vs UC, 76.2% at 1 month (NS). I, 71.4% vs UC, 73.9% at 6 months (NS). I, 69% vs UC, 78.6% at 12 months (NS). I, 69.4% vs UC, 75% at 1 month (NS). I, 64.3% vs UC, 71% at 6 months (NS). I, 63.8% vs UC 76.8% at 12 months (NS). Urine samples were collected from 83.8% (258 of 308) of participants who reported abstinence. Cotinine validations rates were 85.6% at 1 month, 91.3% at 6 months, 89.6% at 12 months | Consumption of cigarettes per day. Stage of change; 12-month follow-up (for participants who were current smokers at baseline n=96). Predictors of 12-month continuous abstinence (applied to the 96 baseline smokers who completed the trial) | Participants who were smoking at 12 month follow-up (n=30) had significantly reduced their consumption during the study, from 25.4 cigarettes/day (SD=12.8) at baseline to 12.5 (SD=8.1) at 12 months (t=7.67; p=0.0001). No significant difference between I and UC participants. χ2 of the discrepancy between larger number of precontemplators in I group and larger number of participants in the action stage of change in the UC group (p=0.017) Stepwise logistic regression; action stage of change (p=0.0004) entered the model as significant. |
C, control; EC, enhanced care; I, intervention; ITT, intention to treat; NS, not significant; UC, usual care.