Smoking Cessation Clinical Trial
Official title:
Transdermal Nicotine Therapy as an Adjunct to Behavioral Smoking Cessation Counseling in Syrian Primary Care Settings
The study is a two-arm, parallel group, randomized, placebo-controlled, double blind trial, conducted at four primary health care centers in Aleppo, Syria, to test the efficacy of transdermal nicotine patch therapy vs. placebo patch therapy, when delivered with behavioral counseling, on smoking cessation rates.
The study is a two-arm, parallel group, randomized, placebo-controlled, double blind trial,
conducted at four primary health care centers in Aleppo, Syria, to test the efficacy of
behavioral counseling with and without transdermal nicotine therapy on long-term smoking
cessation rates. The trial will be conducted at four primary care clinics in Aleppo, Syria
that are sponsored by private or non governmental organizations. Clinic physicians will be
trained to provide a brief assessment of each patient's smoking status and motivation to
quit, and to refer appropriate patients to a cessation clinic within the primary care
center. Eligible and interested smokers will be randomized to receive behavioral cessation
counseling + nicotine patch or behavioral cessation counseling + placebo patch. Behavioral
counseling will be delivered by a physician at each clinic.
After eligibility is determined and a description of the cessation program has been
provided, written informed consent will be obtained. When literacy is a concern, the consent
form will be read to the subjects who will then mark the form to indicate consent.
Participants will provide baseline demographic data (age, gender, ethnicity, residence,
marital status, education, occupation, income), smoking related information (smoking
history, level of dependence, interest in quitting, comorbidities), and complete additional
questionnaires to assess quitting self-efficacy, stage of change, withdrawal symptoms, and
depression/mood.
Participants will then be allocated to one of two treatment conditions (Arm A: behavioral
counseling + nicotine patch vs. Arm B: behavioral counseling + placebo patch) using random
permuted blocks, stratified according to primary care center and gender. Specific behavioral
and pharmacological intervention procedures are as follows:
Participants in Arm A will receive active transdermal nicotine, and participants in Arm B
will receive placebo patch. Transdermal nicotine replacement was selected as the
pharmacologic agent of choice, based on its ease of use, acceptability to patients,
favorable side effect and contraindications profile, and its well researched and documented
efficacy (Fiore et al., 1994). Additionally, our pilot intervention work in Syria indicates
a high degree of acceptability of the patch as a potential smoking cessation intervention
(Asfar et al., 2005).
In accordance with clinical practice guidelines in the U.S. (Fiore et al., 2000),
participants will receive six weeks of patch treatment, 24 hour dose, using a step-down
algorithm. Participants who smoke greater than 10 cigarettes/day will be receive two weeks
of 21 mg patch, followed by two weeks of 14 mg patch, and then two weeks of 7 mg patch.
Participants who smoke 5-9 cigarettes per day will receive four weeks of 14 mg patch,
followed by two weeks of 7 mg.
Subjects in both arms receive three brief face-to-face counseling sessions and five brief
(approximately 10 minute) phone counseling calls. Session 1 occurs 3-4 days before the
scheduled quit day and focuses on preparing to quit. Calls 1 and 2 occur the day before and
the day after quit day, respectively, and focus on surviving the first few days as a
non-smoker. Session 2 takes place 7 days after the quit day and emphasizes provision of
social support, problem solving, and coping with withdrawal symptoms and negative emotions.
The final session occurs 14 days after quit day and emphasizes relapse prevention and coping
skills training. An additional three phone calls occur 10, 30, and 45 days after quit day
and provide social support, check progress, and reinforce coping skills. Follow-up
assessments occur at 7 weeks, 6 months, and 12 months post-cessation.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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