Cessation of smoking in people attending UK emergency departments: the COSTED RCT with economic and process evaluation.

IF 4 2区 医学 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Ian Pope, Lucy V Clark, Allan Clark, Emma Ward, Pippa Belderson, Susan Stirling, Steve Parrott, Jinshuo Li, Timothy Coats, Linda Bauld, Richard Holland, Sarah Gentry, Sanjay Agrawal, Benjamin M Bloom, Adrian Boyle, Alasdair Gray, M Geraint Morris, Caitlin Notley
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: The emergency department represents a potentially valuable opportunity to support smoking cessation. Evidence is lacking around the use of e-cigarettes in opportunistic settings like the emergency department.

Objective: To undertake a randomised controlled trial in people who smoke attending United Kingdom emergency departments, testing a brief intervention which included provision of an e-cigarette versus signposting to smoking cessation services, assessing smoking abstinence.

Design: A two-arm pragmatic, multicentre, parallel-group, individually randomised, controlled superiority trial with an internal pilot, economic evaluation and mixed-methods process evaluation.

Setting: Six emergency departments across England and Scotland.

Participants: Adults who smoked daily, who were attending the emergency department for medical treatment or accompanying someone attending for medical treatment, were invited to participate. People were excluded if they had an expired carbon monoxide of < 8 parts per million, required immediate medical treatment, were in police custody, had a known allergy to nicotine, were daily e-cigarette users, were considered not to have capacity to consent or had already taken part in the trial.

Intervention: Brief stop smoking advice, e-cigarette starter kit and referral to stop smoking services.

Main outcome measures: The primary outcome was biochemically validated sustained abstinence at 6 months. Those lost to follow-up, or not providing biochemical verification, were considered not to be abstinent. Secondary outcomes were: self-reported 7-day smoking abstinence, number of quit attempts, number of cigarettes per day, nicotine dependence and incidence of self-reported dry cough or mouth or throat irritation.

Results: At 6 months, of 972 participants randomised, biochemically verified smoking abstinence was 7.2% in the intervention group and 4.1% in the control group (percentage difference = 3.3%) (95% confidence interval 0.3 to 6.3; p = 0.032) [relative risk 1.76 (95% confidence interval 1.03 to 3.01)]. Self-reported 7-day abstinence at 6 months was 23.3% in the intervention group and 12.9% in the control group (percentage difference = 10.6%) (95% confidence interval 5.86 to 15.41; p < 0.001) [relative risk 1.80 (95% confidence interval 1.36 to 2.38)]. Daily e-cigarette use was 39.4% in the intervention group and 17.5% in the control group at 6 months. No serious adverse events related to taking part in the trial were reported. The economic evaluation found the intervention was likely to be cost-effective, judged by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence threshold. The process evaluation found the intervention to be acceptable to both staff delivering it and participants receiving it. The brief nature of the intervention was highly adaptable to context, and interviews demonstrated how the intervention supported different pathways towards cessation.

Limitations: The inability to blind participants or researchers, the relatively low level of biochemical verification due to the nature of the population recruited and the fact that those in the control group did not receive usual care.

Conclusions: An opportunistic smoking cessation intervention comprising brief advice, an e-cigarette starter kit and referral to stop smoking services is effective for sustained smoking abstinence with few reported adverse events.

Future work: Future work will include testing other behaviour change interventions in the emergency department and adapting the Cessation of Smoking Trial in the emergency department intervention for other settings.

Funding: This synopsis presents independent research funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment programme as award number NIHR129438.

在英国急诊科就诊的人戒烟:经济和过程评估的成本计算随机对照试验
背景:急诊科是支持戒烟的潜在宝贵机会。在急诊等机会性环境中使用电子烟的证据不足。目的:对在英国急诊科就诊的吸烟者进行一项随机对照试验,测试一种简短的干预措施,包括提供电子烟与戒烟服务的指示牌,评估戒烟情况。设计:两臂实用、多中心、平行组、单独随机、控制优势试验,内部试点,经济评估和混合方法过程评估。环境:英格兰和苏格兰的六个急诊科。参与者:每天吸烟的成年人,在急诊室接受医疗治疗或陪同他人接受医疗治疗,被邀请参加。如果人们有过期的一氧化碳干预:简短的戒烟建议,电子烟入门工具包和转介戒烟服务,则被排除在外。主要结局指标:主要结局是6个月时经生化验证的持续禁欲。那些失去随访或没有提供生化验证的人被认为不是禁欲。次要结果是:自我报告的7天戒烟情况、戒烟尝试次数、每天吸烟次数、尼古丁依赖以及自我报告的干咳、口腔或喉咙发炎的发生率。结果:在6个月时,972名随机受试者中,经生化验证的戒烟率在干预组为7.2%,在对照组为4.1%(百分比差异= 3.3%)(95%置信区间0.3 ~ 6.3;P = 0.032)[相对危险度1.76(95%可信区间1.03 ~ 3.01)]。干预组6个月时自我报告的7天戒断率为23.3%,对照组为12.9%(百分比差异= 10.6%)(95%置信区间5.86 ~ 15.41;p限制:无法使参与者或研究人员失明,由于所招募人群的性质,生化验证水平相对较低,并且对照组的人没有接受常规护理。结论:机会性戒烟干预包括简短的建议、电子烟入门工具包和转诊戒烟服务,对持续戒烟有效,几乎没有不良事件报告。未来的工作:未来的工作将包括在急诊科测试其他行为改变干预措施,并将戒烟试验在急诊科的干预措施适应其他环境。资助:本摘要介绍了由国家卫生与保健研究所(NIHR)卫生技术评估计划资助的独立研究,奖励号为NIHR129438。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Health technology assessment
Health technology assessment 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
94
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Health Technology Assessment (HTA) publishes research information on the effectiveness, costs and broader impact of health technologies for those who use, manage and provide care in the NHS.
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