This randomized clinical trial studies enhanced quitline intervention in smoking cessation for patients with non-metastatic lung cancer. Stop-smoking plans suggested by doctors may help patients with early-stage cancer quit smoking
PRIMARY OBJECTIVES: I. To demonstrate the feasibility of delivering an enhanced quitline-based smoking cessation intervention to lung cancer patients in the outpatient oncology setting. SECONDARY OBJECTIVES: I. To gather preliminary outcome data for an enhanced quitline-based smoking cessation intervention adapted to the outpatient oncology setting to support future grant applications. II. To evaluate change in primary patient reported outcomes, including quality of life (quantified by the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy - Lung \[FACT-L\] and the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire - Lung Cancer Module \[EORTC QLQ LC13\]), perceived life stress (quantified by the Perceived Stress Scale), and depression (quantified by the Center for Epidemiological Studies Short Depression Scale \[CESD-10\]), in lung cancer patients in the intervention and control conditions (control arm closed to accrual as of 3/6/2012) from baseline to 3-months following randomization. OUTLINE: Patients are randomized to 1 of 2 treatment arms. ARM I (closed to accrual as of 3/6/2012): Patients receive a personalized letter from their physician with advice to quit smoking and a copy of the National Cancer Institute's "Cleaning the Air" smoking cessation booklet. ARM II: Patients receive a personalized letter and a smoking cessation booklet. Patients also receive an 8-week supply of nicotine replacement patches and undergo a counseling session over 30-45 minutes with a trained nurse or midlevel provider that focuses on the benefits of quitting smoking for cancer patients and addresses cancer-specific concerns about smoking cessation. Patients also undergo a quitline-based smoking cessation intervention comprising 5 individual 25- to 30-minute telephone counseling sessions and unlimited inbound phone-based access to Quit Coaches over 8-11 weeks, mailed written materials, and an interactive online program. After completion of study treatment, patients are followed up at 3 months.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
6
Ancillary studies
Ancillary studies
Undergo counseling session
Receive enhanced quitline intervention
Receive enhanced quitline intervention
Receive usual care plus
Receive nicotine replacement patches
Receive enhanced quitline intervention
Wake Forest University Health Sciences
Winston-Salem, North Carolina, United States
Participation of patients with lunch cancer in the outpatient oncology setting
Participation rate will be calculated as the proportion of the eligible patients who agree to participate.
Time frame: 1 year
Accrual of patients with lung cancer in the outpatient oncology setting
Estimated as the number of patients accrued divided by the number of months of accrual.
Time frame: Over 1 year
Participant retention
Estimated as the proportion of participating patients who complete questionnaires at the three month follow-up. Participants who discontinue the intervention but complete the outcome assessments will be counted in the numerator for calculating retention. Retention estimates will be calculated overall and by intervention arm. A Fisher exact test will be used to assess the difference in retention between the two arms. Kaplan-Meier methods will be used to estimate the time to drop-out, and a logrank test will be used to assess the difference in these distributions between treatment arms.
Time frame: 3 months
Participant acceptance of the enhanced quitline-based smoking cessation intervention
Evaluated by summarizing the intervention participants' ratings of how much they liked and found the intervention and the interventionists to be helpful and sensitive to their concerns. Exact 95% confidence intervals (CI) will be calculated for these estimates. Open-ended questions regarding these issues will be summarized using qualitative methods.
Time frame: 3 months
Protocol fidelity
Summarized by calculating the proportion of participants in both groups who report that they received advice from their physician to quit smoking, estimating the frequency with which intervention participants completed calls and calculating the mean duration of each call, and calculating the proportion of participants that utilized web-based services (including the frequency of the number of logins and sections visited and mean duration of visit).
Time frame: 3 months
Abstinence rate in both groups
Time frame: 3 months
Comparison of changes in quality of life, stress, and depressive symptoms between groups
Time frame: 3 months
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