Centers for Behavioral and Preventive Medicine, The Miriam Hospital, Coro West, Suite 309, 164 Summit Ave., Providence, RI 02906, United States; Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, United States; VA Boston Healthcare System, 150 S. Huntington Ave., Boston, MA 02130, United States; Department of Psychiatry, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA, United States.
VA Boston Healthcare System, 150 S. Huntington Ave., Boston, MA 02130, United States; Department of Psychiatry, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA, United States.
Addict Behav. 2019 Mar;90:136-142. doi: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2018.10.042. Epub 2018 Oct 29.
Trauma-exposed individuals with and without posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are more likely to smoke and less successful in quit attempts than individuals without psychopathology. Contingency management (CM) techniques (i.e., incentives for abstinence) have demonstrable efficacy for smoking cessation in some populations with psychopathology, but have not been well tested in PTSD. This pilot study examined the feasibility of CM plus brief cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) in promoting smoking cessation among trauma-exposed individuals with and without PTSD.
Fifty trauma-exposed smokers (18 with PTSD) were asked to abstain from tobacco and nicotine replacement therapy for one month. During week one of cessation, CBT was provided daily and increasing CM stipends were paid for each continuous day of biochemically-verified abstinence; CM stipends were withheld in response to smoking lapses and reset to the initial payment level upon abstinence resumption. CBT and fixed payments for study visits were provided during the subsequent three weeks.
Of the 50 eligible participants who attended at least one pre-quit visit (49% female, 35% current PTSD), 43 (86%) attended the first post-quit study visit, 32 (64%) completed the first week of CM/CBT treatment, and 26 (52%) completed the study. Post-quit seven-day point prevalence abstinence rates for participants with and without PTSD, respectively, were similar: 39% vs. 38% (1 week), 33% vs. 28% (2 weeks), 22% vs. 19% (3 weeks), and 22% vs. 13% (4 weeks).
Use of CM + CBT to support tobacco abstinence is a promising intervention for trauma-exposed smokers with and without PTSD.
与患有创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)和没有创伤后应激障碍的创伤暴露个体相比,这些个体更有可能吸烟,并且戒烟尝试的成功率也较低。在某些患有精神病理学的人群中,使用条件管理(CM)技术(即,戒烟奖励)已被证明对戒烟有效,但在 PTSD 中尚未得到充分测试。这项初步研究探讨了 CM 加简短认知行为疗法(CBT)在促进创伤暴露的 PTSD 和非 PTSD 个体戒烟方面的可行性。
要求 50 名创伤后暴露的吸烟者(18 名患有 PTSD)在一个月内戒烟。在戒烟的第一周,每天提供 CBT,并为每连续一天的生物化学验证的戒烟支付递增的 CM 津贴;在吸烟复发时扣发 CM 津贴,并在恢复戒烟时重新设定为初始付款水平。在随后的三周内提供 CBT 和固定的研究访问费用。
在至少参加一次戒烟前访视的 50 名合格参与者中(49%为女性,35%当前患有 PTSD),43 名(86%)参加了第一次戒烟后访视,32 名(64%)完成了第一周的 CM/CBT 治疗,26 名(52%)完成了研究。有和没有 PTSD 的参与者在戒烟后的第 7 天点流行率分别为:39%与 38%(1 周)、33%与 28%(2 周)、22%与 19%(3 周)、22%与 13%(4 周)。
使用 CM+CBT 来支持戒烟对于有和没有 PTSD 的创伤后暴露吸烟者来说是一种很有前途的干预措施。