Crane David, Ubhi Harveen Kaur, Brown Jamie, West Robert
Department of Behavioural Science and Health, University College London, London, WC1E 6BT, UK.
National Centre for Smoking Cessation and Training, Dorchester, DT1 1RD, UK.
F1000Res. 2018 Sep 21;7:1524. doi: 10.12688/f1000research.16148.2. eCollection 2018.
Smartphone applications (apps) are popular aids for smoking cessation. Smoke Free is an app that delivers behaviour change techniques used in effective face-to-face behavioural support programmes. The aim of this study was to assess whether the full version of Smoke Free is more effective than the reduced version. This was a two-arm exploratory randomised controlled trial. Smokers who downloaded Smoke Free were randomly offered the full or reduced version; 28,112 smokers aged 18+ years who set a quit date were included. The full version provided updates on benefits of abstinence, progress (days smoke free), virtual 'badges' and daily 'missions' with push notifications aimed at preventing and managing cravings. The reduced version did not include the missions. At baseline the app recorded users': device type (iPhone or Android), age, sex, daily cigarette consumption, time to first cigarette of the day, and educational level. The primary outcome was self-reported complete abstinence from the quit date in a 3-month follow-up questionnaire delivered via the app. Analyses conducted included logistic regressions of outcome on to app version (full versus reduced) with adjustment for baseline variables using both intention-to-treat/missing-equals smoking (MES) and follow-up-only (FUO) analyses. The 3-month follow-up rate was 8.5% (n=1,213) for the intervention and 6.5% (n=901) for the control. A total of 234 participants reported not smoking in the intervention versus 124 in the control, representing 1.6% versus 0.9% in the MES analysis and 19.3% versus 13.8% in the FUO analysis. Adjusted odds ratios were 1.90, 95%CI=1.53-2.37 (p<0.001) and 1.50, 95%CI=1.18-1.91 (p<0.001) in the MES and FUO analyses respectively. Despite very low follow-up rates using in-app follow up, both intention-to-treat/missing equals smoking and follow-up only analyses showed the full version of the Smoke Free app to result in higher self-reported 3-month continuous smoking abstinence rates than the reduced version.
智能手机应用程序(应用)是戒烟的常用辅助工具。“无烟”应用程序提供了有效面对面行为支持计划中使用的行为改变技巧。本研究旨在评估“无烟”应用程序的完整版是否比精简版更有效。这是一项双臂探索性随机对照试验。下载了“无烟”应用程序的吸烟者被随机提供完整版或精简版;纳入了28112名设定了戒烟日期的18岁及以上吸烟者。完整版提供戒烟益处、进展情况(无烟天数)、虚拟“徽章”以及每日“任务”的更新,并通过推送通知来预防和管理烟瘾。精简版不包括任务。在基线时,该应用程序记录了用户的设备类型(苹果手机或安卓手机)、年龄、性别、每日吸烟量、一天中第一支烟的时间以及教育程度。主要结局是通过该应用程序发送的3个月随访问卷中自我报告的从戒烟日期起完全戒烟情况。进行的分析包括将结局对应用程序版本(完整版与精简版)进行逻辑回归,并使用意向性分析/缺失值等于吸烟(MES)和仅随访(FUO)分析对基线变量进行调整。干预组的3个月随访率为8.5%(n = 1213),对照组为6.5%(n = 901)。干预组共有234名参与者报告戒烟,对照组为124名,在MES分析中分别占1.6%和0.9%,在FUO分析中分别占19.3%和13.8%。在MES和FUO分析中,调整后的比值比分别为1.90,95%置信区间=1.53 - 2.37(p < 0.001)和1.50,95%置信区间=1.18 - 1.91(p < 0.001)。尽管使用应用内随访的随访率非常低,但意向性分析/缺失值等于吸烟和仅随访分析均显示,“无烟”应用程序的完整版导致自我报告的3个月持续戒烟率高于精简版。