Hsu Chiao-Lin, Hsueh Kuang-Chieh, Chou Ming-Yueh, Yu Hsien-Chung, Mar Guang-Yuan, Chen Hong-Jhe, West Robert
Department of Physical Examination Center, Kaohsiung Veterans General Hospital, Taiwan.
Center for Geriatrics and Gerontology, Kaohsiung Veterans General Hospital, Taiwan.
Addict Behav Rep. 2018 Jul 3;8:62-65. doi: 10.1016/j.abrep.2018.07.001. eCollection 2018 Dec.
Smoking cessation improves life expectancy at any age. There is some evidence that elderly smokers have at least as good a chance of successfully stopping as other smokers but direct comparisons with long-term follow up are rare. This study aimed to compare success rates up to 3 years in smokers aged 65+ versus other adult smokers with and without adjustment for a range of other smoker characteristics.
This was a prospective study of 1065 smokers who attended a stop-smoking clinic in Taiwan. Participants (896 < 65 years, 169 65+ years) were followed up by telephone 3, 6, 12 and 36 months after the initial quit date. Prolonged abstinence (abstinent at all follow-ups) and point prevalence abstinence (7 days prior to final follow up) were compared between 'elderly' participants aged 65+ years versus 'non-elderly' participants aged <65 years with and without adjustment for a range of baseline smoker characteristics (sex, educational level, previous quit attempts, cigarette dependence score). Non-responders were considered to be smoking.
Prolonged 36-month abstinence rates were 20.1% (N = 34) and 15.3% (N = 137) in the elderly and non-elderly participants respectively (p = 0.137). Point prevalence 36-month abstinence rates were 37.3% (N = 63) and 26.5% (N = 237) in the elderly and non-elderly participants respectively (p = 0.005). The odds ratios comparing elderly versus non-elderly abstinence rates after adjustment for baseline variables were 1.17 (95%CI = 0.75-1.83) and 1.52 (95%CI = 1.05-2.20) for prolonged abstinence and point prevalence abstinence respectively.
Elderly smokers attending smoker clinics in Taiwan appear to be at least as likely to achieve long-term abstinence as other adult smokers.
戒烟可提高任何年龄段人群的预期寿命。有证据表明,老年吸烟者成功戒烟的几率至少与其他吸烟者一样高,但很少有对长期随访结果进行直接比较的研究。本研究旨在比较65岁及以上吸烟者与其他成年吸烟者在3年内的戒烟成功率,并对一系列其他吸烟者特征进行调整。
这是一项对台湾一家戒烟诊所的1065名吸烟者进行的前瞻性研究。参与者(896名年龄小于65岁,169名年龄65岁及以上)在初始戒烟日期后的3、6、12和36个月接受电话随访。比较65岁及以上的“老年”参与者与年龄小于65岁的“非老年”参与者在调整一系列基线吸烟者特征(性别、教育水平、既往戒烟尝试、香烟依赖评分)前后的长期戒烟率(在所有随访中均保持戒烟状态)和时点患病率戒烟率(最后一次随访前7天)。未回复者被视为仍在吸烟。
老年和非老年参与者的36个月长期戒烟率分别为20.1%(N = 34)和15.3%(N = 137)(p = 0.137)。老年和非老年参与者的36个月时点患病率戒烟率分别为37.3%(N = 63)和26.5%(N = 237)(p = 0.005)。在对基线变量进行调整后,老年与非老年戒烟率的比值比,长期戒烟率为1.17(95%CI = 0.75 - 1.83),时点患病率戒烟率为1.52(95%CI = 1.05 - 2.20)。
在台湾的戒烟诊所就诊的老年吸烟者实现长期戒烟的可能性似乎至少与其他成年吸烟者一样高。