提高烟草依赖药物依从性的干预措施。

Interventions to increase adherence to medications for tobacco dependence.

作者信息

Hollands Gareth J, McDermott Máirtín S, Lindson-Hawley Nicola, Vogt Florian, Farley Amanda, Aveyard Paul

机构信息

Behaviour and Health Research Unit, University of Cambridge, Forvie Site, Robinson Way, Cambridge, UK, CB2 0SR.

出版信息

Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2015 Feb 23(2):CD009164. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD009164.pub2.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Pharmacological treatments for tobacco dependence, such as nicotine replacement therapy (NRT), have been shown to be safe and effective interventions for smoking cessation. Higher levels of adherence to these medications increase the likelihood of sustained smoking cessation, but many smokers use them at a lower dose and for less time than is optimal. It is therefore important to determine the effectiveness of interventions designed specifically to increase medication adherence. Such interventions may include further educating individuals about the value of taking medications and providing additional support to overcome problems with maintaining adherence.

OBJECTIVES

The primary objective of this review was to assess the effectiveness of interventions to increase adherence to medications for smoking cessation, such as NRT, bupropion, nortriptyline and varenicline (and combination regimens). This was considered in comparison to a control group, typically representing standard care. Secondary objectives were to i) assess which intervention approaches are most effective; ii) determine the impact of interventions on potential precursors of adherence, such as understanding of the treatment and efficacy perceptions; and iii) evaluate key outcomes influenced by prior adherence, principally smoking cessation.

SEARCH METHODS

We searched the following databases using keywords and medical subject headings: Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL, The Cochrane Library), MEDLINE (OVID SP) (1946 to July Week 3 2014), EMBASE (OVID SP) (1980 to Week 29 2014), and PsycINFO (OVID SP) (1806 to July Week 4 2014). The Cochrane Tobacco Addiction Group Specialized Register was searched on 9th July 2014. We conducted forward and backward citation searches.

SELECTION CRITERIA

Randomised, cluster-randomised or quasi-randomised studies in which participants using active pharmacological treatment for smoking cessation are allocated to an intervention arm or a control arm. Eligible participants were adult (18+) smokers. Eligible interventions comprised any intervention that differed from standard care, and where the intervention content had a clear principal focus on increasing adherence to medications for tobacco dependence. Acceptable comparison groups were those that provided standard care, which depending on setting may comprise minimal support or varying degrees of behavioural support. Included studies used a measure of adherence behaviour that allowed some assessment of the degree of adherence.

DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS

Two review authors searched for studies and independently extracted data for included studies. Risk of bias was assessed according to the Cochrane Handbook guidance. For continuous outcome measures, we report effect sizes as standardised mean differences (SMDs). For dichotomous outcome measures, we report effect sizes as relative risks (RRs). We obtained pooled effect sizes with 95% confidence intervals (CIs) using the fixed effects model.

MAIN RESULTS

Our search strategy retrieved 3165 unique references and we identified 31 studies as potentially eligible for inclusion. Of these, 23 studies were excluded at full-text screening stage or identified as studies awaiting classification subject to further information. We included eight studies involving 3336 randomised participants. The interventions were all additional to standard behavioural support and typically provided further information on the rationale for, and emphasised the importance of, adherence to medication, and supported the development of strategies to overcome problems with maintaining adherence.Five studies reported on whether or not participants achieved a specified satisfactory level of adherence to medication. There was evidence that adherence interventions led to modest improvements in adherence, with a relative risk (RR) of 1.14 (95% CI, 1.02 to 1.28, P = 0.02, n = 1630). Four studies reported continuous measures of adherence to medication. Although the standardised mean difference (SMD) favoured adherence interventions, the effect was small and not statistically significant (SMD 0.07, 95% CI, -0.03 to 0.17, n = 1529). Applying the GRADE system, the quality of evidence for these results was assessed as moderate and low, respectively.There was evidence that adherence interventions led to modest improvements in rates of cessation. The relative risk for achieving abstinence was similar to that for improved adherence. It was not significant in meta-analysis of four studies providing short-term abstinence: RR = 1.07 (95% CI 0.95 to 1.21, n = 1755), but there was statistically significant evidence of improved abstinence at six months or more from a different set of four studies: RR = 1.16 (95% CI, 1.01 to 1.34, P = 0.03, n = 3049). Applying the GRADE system, the quality of evidence for these results was assessed as low for both.As interventions were similar in nature and the number of studies was low, it was not possible to investigate whether different types of intervention approaches were more effective than others. Relevant outcomes other than adherence or cessation were not reported.There was no evidence that interventions to increase adherence to medication led to any adverse events. All included studies were assessed as at high or unclear risk of bias. This was often due to a lack of clarity in reporting - meaning assessments were unclear - rather than clear evidence of failing to sufficiently safeguard against the risk of bias.

AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: There is some evidence that interventions that devote special attention to improving adherence to smoking cessation medication through providing information and facilitating problem-solving can improve adherence, though the evidence for this is not strong and is limited in both quality and quantity. There is some evidence that such interventions improve the chances of achieving abstinence but again the evidence for this is relatively weak.

摘要

背景

药物治疗烟草依赖,如尼古丁替代疗法(NRT),已被证明是戒烟的安全有效干预措施。更高水平地坚持使用这些药物可增加持续戒烟的可能性,但许多吸烟者使用药物的剂量低于最佳剂量,且使用时间也不足。因此,确定专门设计用于提高药物依从性的干预措施的有效性非常重要。此类干预措施可能包括进一步教育个人关于服药的价值,并提供额外支持以克服维持依从性方面的问题。

目的

本综述的主要目的是评估旨在提高戒烟药物(如NRT、安非他酮、去甲替林和伐尼克兰(以及联合用药方案))依从性的干预措施的有效性。将其与通常代表标准护理的对照组进行比较。次要目的是:i)评估哪种干预方法最有效;ii)确定干预措施对依从性潜在先兆因素的影响,如对治疗的理解和疗效认知;iii)评估受先前依从性影响的关键结局,主要是戒烟情况。

检索方法

我们使用关键词和医学主题词检索了以下数据库:Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL,Cochrane图书馆)、MEDLINE(OVID SP)(1946年至2014年第3周)、EMBASE(OVID SP)(1980年至2014年第29周)和PsycINFO(OVID SP)(1806年至2014年第4周)。2014年7月9日检索了Cochrane烟草成瘾小组专业注册库。我们进行了向前和向后的引文检索。

选择标准

随机、整群随机或半随机研究,其中使用积极药物治疗戒烟的参与者被分配到干预组或对照组。符合条件的参与者为成年(18岁以上)吸烟者。符合条件的干预措施包括任何不同于标准护理的干预措施,且干预内容的主要重点是提高对烟草依赖药物的依从性。可接受的比较组是提供标准护理的组,根据具体情况,标准护理可能包括最少的支持或不同程度的行为支持。纳入的研究使用了一种依从性行为测量方法,以便对依从程度进行一些评估。

数据收集与分析

两位综述作者检索研究并独立提取纳入研究的数据。根据Cochrane手册指南评估偏倚风险。对于连续结局测量,我们将效应量报告为标准化均数差(SMD)。对于二分结局测量,我们将效应量报告为相对风险(RR)。我们使用固定效应模型获得合并效应量及95%置信区间(CI)。

主要结果

我们的检索策略检索到3165篇独特参考文献,我们确定31项研究可能符合纳入标准。其中,23项研究在全文筛选阶段被排除,或被确定为有待根据进一步信息进行分类的研究。我们纳入了八项研究,涉及3336名随机参与者。这些干预措施均是在标准行为支持之外的,通常会提供关于服药原理的进一步信息,并强调坚持服药的重要性,还支持制定克服维持依从性问题的策略。五项研究报告了参与者是否达到了指定的满意服药依从水平。有证据表明,依从性干预措施使依从性有适度改善,相对风险(RR)为1.14(95%CI,1.02至1.28,P = 0.02,n = 1630)。四项研究报告了服药依从性的连续测量结果。尽管标准化均数差(SMD)有利于依从性干预措施,但效应较小且无统计学意义(SMD 0.07,9%CI, -0.03至0.17,n = 1529)。应用GRADE系统,这些结果的证据质量分别被评估为中等和低等。有证据表明,依从性干预措施使戒烟率有适度改善。实现戒烟的相对风险与改善依从性的相对风险相似。在四项提供短期戒烟情况的研究的荟萃分析中不显著:RR = 1.07(95%CI 0.95至1.21,n = 1755),但从另一组四项研究中有统计学显著证据表明六个月或更长时间的戒烟情况有所改善:RR = 1.16(95%CI,1.01至1.34,P = 0.03,n = 3049)。应用GRADE系统,这些结果的证据质量均被评估为低等。由于干预措施性质相似且研究数量较少,无法调查不同类型的干预方法是否比其他方法更有效。未报告依从性或戒烟情况以外的相关结局。没有证据表明提高药物依从性的干预措施会导致任何不良事件。所有纳入研究被评估为存在高偏倚风险或偏倚风险不明确。这通常是由于报告不清晰——意味着评估不明确——而不是有明确证据表明未能充分防范偏倚风险。

作者结论

有一些证据表明,通过提供信息和促进问题解决来特别关注提高戒烟药物依从性的干预措施可以改善依从性,尽管这方面的证据并不充分,且在质量和数量上都有限。有一些证据表明,此类干预措施可提高戒烟的机会,但同样,这方面的证据相对较弱。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索