School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Newcastle, Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia
Drug and Alcohol Clinical Services, Hunter New England Local Health District, Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia.
BMJ Open. 2019 Nov 21;9(11):e032330. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-032330.
While tobacco smoking prevalence is falling in many western societies, it remains elevated among high-priority cohorts. Rates up to 95% have been reported in women whose pregnancy is complicated by other substance use. In this group, the potential for poor pregnancy outcomes and adverse physical and neurobiological fetal development are elevated by tobacco smoking. Unfortunately, few targeted and effective tobacco dependence treatments exist to assist cessation in this population. The study will trial an evidence-based, multicomponent tobacco smoking treatment tailored to pregnant women who use other substances. The intervention comprises financial incentives for biochemically verified abstinence, psychotherapy delivered by drug and alcohol counsellors, and nicotine replacement therapy. It will be piloted at three government-based, primary healthcare facilities in New South Wales (NSW) and Victoria, Australia. The study will assess the feasibility and acceptability of the treatment when integrated into routine antenatal care offered by substance use in pregnancy antenatal services.
The study will use a single-arm design with pre-post comparisons. One hundred clients will be recruited from antenatal clinics with a substance use in pregnancy service. Women must be <33 weeks' gestation, ≥16 years old and a current tobacco smoker. The primary outcomes are feasibility, assessed by recruitment and retention and the acceptability of addressing smoking among this population. Secondary outcomes include changes in smoking behaviours, the comparison of adverse maternal outcomes and neonatal characteristics to those of a historical control group, and a cost-consequence analysis of the intervention implementation.
Protocol approval was granted by Hunter New England Human Research Ethics Committee (Reference 17/04/12/4.05), with additional ethical approval sought from the Aboriginal Health and Medical Research Council of NSW (Reference 1249/17). Findings will be disseminated via academic conferences, peer-reviewed publications and social media.
Australia New Zealand Clinical Trial Registry (Ref: ACTRN12618000576224).
尽管许多西方国家的烟草吸烟率正在下降,但在高优先级人群中仍居高不下。在因其他物质使用而使妊娠复杂化的妇女中,报告的比率高达 95%。在这一组中,由于烟草吸烟,妊娠结局不良以及身体和神经生物学胎儿发育不良的可能性增加。不幸的是,很少有针对该人群的有效烟草依赖治疗方法来帮助其戒烟。该研究将试验一种针对使用其他物质的孕妇的基于证据的多成分烟草治疗方法。该干预措施包括针对生物化学验证的禁欲的经济激励措施,由药物和酒精顾问提供的心理治疗以及尼古丁替代疗法。它将在澳大利亚新南威尔士州(NSW)和维多利亚州的三个政府基层医疗保健设施中进行试点。该研究将评估在将治疗方法整合到针对有物质使用的妊娠产妇服务中提供的常规产前护理中时的可行性和可接受性。
该研究将采用单臂设计,进行前后比较。将从有物质使用的妊娠服务的产前诊所中招募 100 名患者。女性必须<33 周妊娠,年龄≥16 岁且目前吸烟。主要结果是可行性,通过招募和保留来评估,以及在该人群中解决吸烟问题的可接受性。次要结果包括吸烟行为的变化,将不良产妇结局和新生儿特征与历史对照组进行比较,以及对干预措施实施的成本效益分析。
亨特新英格兰人类研究伦理委员会(参考号 17/04/12/4.05)已批准该方案,还将从新南威尔士州原住民卫生和医学研究理事会(参考号 1249/17)获得额外的伦理批准。研究结果将通过学术会议,同行评审出版物和社交媒体进行传播。
澳大利亚新西兰临床试验注册中心(注册号:ACTRN12618000576224)。