Authors

  1. Amato, Katharine A. PhD, MPH
  2. Reid, Mary E. PhD
  3. Ochs-Balcom, Heather M. PhD
  4. Giovino, Gary A. PhD
  5. Bansal-Travers, Maansi PhD
  6. Warren, Graham W. MD, PhD
  7. Mahoney, Martin C. MD, PhD
  8. Hyland, Andrew J. PhD

Abstract

Context: Cancer patients' continued tobacco use results in poorer therapeutic outcomes including decreased quality of life and survival.

 

Objective: To assess reach and impact of a free, opt-out, telephone-based tobacco cessation program for thoracic cancer center patients.

 

Design: Observational study.

 

Setting: Comprehensive Cancer Center in Western New York.

 

Participants: Current or recent (within past 30 days) tobacco-using thoracic cancer center patients referred to a tobacco cessation support service between October 2010 and October 2012 at a Comprehensive Cancer Center (n = 942/1313 referrals were eligible for cessation support).

 

Intervention: A free, opt-out, telephone-based cessation service that was implemented as standard of care. Cessation specialists had patient-guided conversations that assessed readiness to quit; methods used in the past provided cessation strategies and worked to set up a quit date. There was an average of 35.9 days between referral and first contact.

 

Main Outcome Measures: Program reach (referral and participation rates) and impact (as self-reported cessation outcomes measured twice after referral).

 

Results: Of 942 patients, 730 (77.5%) referred to and called by a tobacco cessation service participated in at least 1 cessation support call, of which 440 of 730 (60.3%) were called for follow-up and 89.5% (394/440) participated. In total, 20.2% (69/342) of current smokers at referral reported at least 7-day abstinence at follow-up. Among current smokers at referral and first contact, being married (odds ratio [OR] = 2.05; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.01-4.18) and having a lower Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance score (OR = 4.05; 95% CI, 1.58-10.39) were associated with quitting at follow-up, after controlling for demographic, clinical, and health behavior characteristics.

 

Conclusions: Our results demonstrate that 78% of thoracic cancer center patients, if contacted, participated at least once in this cessation support service; for current smokers at referral and first contact, being married and having a lower ECOG performance score were associated with self-reported quitting at follow-up. Other organizations may find our results useful while implementing a systematic way to identify tobacco-using patients as part of routine care and to improve available cessation support services.