Park Elyse R, Ostroff Jamie S, Perez Giselle K, Hyland Kelly A, Rigotti Nancy A, Borderud Sarah, Regan Susan, Muzikansky Alona, Friedman Emily R, Levy Douglas E, Holland Susan, Eusebio Justin, Peterson Lisa, Rabin Julia, Miller-Sobel Jacob, Gonzalez Irina, Malloy Laura, O'Brien Maureen, de León-Sanchez Suhana, Whitlock C Will
Mongan Institute for Health Policy, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, United States; Tobacco Research and Treatment Center, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, United States; Cancer Outcomes Research Program, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, United States; Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, United States; Benson-Henry Institute for Mind Body Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, United States; Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States.
Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Tobacco Treatment Program, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY, United States.
Contemp Clin Trials. 2016 Sep;50:54-65. doi: 10.1016/j.cct.2016.07.016. Epub 2016 Jul 19.
Despite the well-established risks of persistent smoking, 10-30% of cancer patients continue to smoke after diagnosis. Evidence-based tobacco treatment has yet to be integrated into routine oncology care. This paper describes the protocol, manualized treatment, evaluation plan, and overall study design of comparing the effectiveness and cost of two treatments across two major cancer centers.
METHODS/DESIGN: A two-arm, two-site randomized controlled comparative effectiveness trial is testing the hypothesis that an Intensive Treatment (IT) intervention is more effective than a Standard Treatment (ST) intervention in helping recently diagnosed cancer patients quit smoking. Both interventions include 4 weekly counseling sessions and FDA-approved smoking cessation medication advice. The IT includes an additional 4 biweekly and 3 monthly booster sessions as well as dispensal of the recommended FDA-approved smoking cessation medication at no cost. The trial is enrolling patients with suspected or newly diagnosed cancer who have smoked a cigarette in the past 30days. Participants are randomly assigned to receive the ST or IT condition. Tobacco cessation outcomes are assessed at 3 and 6months. The primary study outcome is 7-day point prevalence biochemically-validated tobacco abstinence. Secondary study outcomes include the incremental cost-effectiveness of the IT vs. ST.
This trial will answer key questions about delivering tobacco treatment interventions to newly diagnosed cancer patients. If found to be efficacious and cost-effective, this treatment will serve as a model to be integrated into oncology care settings nation-wide, as we strive to improve treatment outcomes and quality of life for cancer patients.
尽管持续吸烟的风险已得到充分证实,但仍有10%-30%的癌症患者在确诊后继续吸烟。基于证据的烟草治疗尚未纳入常规肿瘤护理。本文描述了在两个主要癌症中心比较两种治疗方法的有效性和成本的方案、标准化治疗、评估计划及总体研究设计。
方法/设计:一项双臂、双中心随机对照比较有效性试验正在检验以下假设:强化治疗(IT)干预在帮助近期确诊的癌症患者戒烟方面比标准治疗(ST)干预更有效。两种干预均包括4次每周一次的咨询会议以及FDA批准的戒烟药物建议。IT还包括另外4次每两周一次和3次每月一次的强化会议,以及免费发放推荐的FDA批准的戒烟药物。该试验正在招募在过去30天内吸过烟的疑似或新确诊癌症患者。参与者被随机分配接受ST或IT治疗。在3个月和6个月时评估戒烟结果。主要研究结果是经过生化验证的7天点患病率戒烟情况。次要研究结果包括IT与ST相比的增量成本效益。
该试验将回答有关为新确诊癌症患者提供烟草治疗干预措施的关键问题。如果被证明有效且具有成本效益,这种治疗将作为一种模式在全国范围内纳入肿瘤护理环境,因为我们努力改善癌症患者的治疗结果和生活质量。