Burris Jessica L, Ostroff Jamie S, Reilly Eileen M, Warren Graham W, Shelton Rachel C, Mullett Timothy W
Department of Psychology, College of Arts and Sciences, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY.
J Clin Oncol. 2025 Mar;43(7):821-828. doi: 10.1200/JCO.24.00304. Epub 2024 Nov 19.
Persistent smoking after cancer diagnosis causes adverse outcomes while smoking cessation can improve survival. Thus, integration of smoking assessment and cessation assistance into routine cancer care is critical. Aiming for incremental practice change that could be sustained and built upon through future quality improvement (QI) projects, the American College of Surgeons initiated Just ASK in 2022 to increase implementation of smoking assessment among its accredited Cancer Programs. This manuscript describes outcomes from Just ASK.
Seven hundred sixty-two programs enrolled in this cohort study, followed Plan Do Study Act methodology, and used local QI teams to facilitate practice change. The primary outcome was the ask rate (ie, patients asked/patients seen). Programs completed three surveys across the 1-year study (89.8% retention), answering questions about their program plus organizational readiness, implementation barriers, implementation strategies, and clinical practices related to assessing smoking among patients newly diagnosed with cancer. Data analysis involved descriptive statistics and analysis of change over time (eg, McNemar chi-squares).
Programs (53.1% community-based) tended to report moderate organizational readiness, multiple implementation barriers, and adoption of 4.63 ± 1.49 of eight possible implementation strategies (eg, training staff/providers). Programs reported frequency of assessing smoking status, documenting it in the electronic health record, advising patients who smoke to quit, and documenting advice and treatment increased over time (all < .001). The ask rate increased from baseline to mid to final survey ( < .01; 87.79% 88.65% 91.92%, respectively).
Just ASK is the latest, and by far the largest, endeavor to improve assessment of cancer patients' smoking status. Participants reported significant advances within a short time span and study results underscore the potential for national accreditation organizations to transform oncology practice.
癌症诊断后持续吸烟会导致不良后果,而戒烟可提高生存率。因此,将吸烟评估和戒烟援助纳入常规癌症护理至关重要。为了实现逐步的实践变革,并通过未来的质量改进(QI)项目得以持续和发展,美国外科医师学会于2022年启动了“Just ASK”项目,以增加其认可的癌症项目中吸烟评估的实施。本文描述了“Just ASK”项目的成果。
762个项目参与了这项队列研究,遵循计划-执行-研究-行动方法,并利用当地的QI团队促进实践变革。主要结果是询问率(即询问的患者数/就诊的患者数)。各项目在为期1年的研究中完成了三项调查(保留率为89.8%),回答了关于其项目以及组织准备情况、实施障碍、实施策略和与新诊断癌症患者吸烟评估相关的临床实践等问题。数据分析包括描述性统计和随时间变化的分析(如McNemar卡方检验)。
各项目(53.1%为社区项目)倾向于报告组织准备情况中等、存在多种实施障碍,并且采用了八种可能的实施策略中的4.63±1.49种(如培训工作人员/提供者)。各项目报告称,随着时间的推移,吸烟状况评估的频率、在电子健康记录中记录、建议吸烟患者戒烟以及记录建议和治疗情况均有所增加(均P<0.001)。询问率从基线调查到中期调查再到最终调查有所增加(P<0.01;分别为87.79%、88.65%、91.92%)。
“Just ASK”是改善癌症患者吸烟状况评估的最新且迄今为止规模最大的努力。参与者在短时间内取得了显著进展,研究结果强调了国家认证组织改变肿瘤学实践的潜力。