Smoking Clinical Trial
Official title:
Randomized Controlled Trial of Mailed Nicotine Replacement Therapy to Canadian Smokers
This study will examine the efficacy of mailed distribution of free Nicotine Replacement Therapy to smokers. Telephone numbers will be randomly selected from across Canada in order to recruit adult smokers interested in completing a smoking survey and willing to be interviewed again in 8 weeks and 6 months time. Study participants will be asked about their smoking history and a hypothetical question: would they be interested in receiving the nicotine patch if this were to be provided to them free of charge? Participants expressing interest will be randomly assigned to one of two groups. One group will be offered the opportunity to actually receive a program of 5 weeks of the nicotine patch for free right away and the other group will not be offered the free nicotine patches. The proportions of smokers in the two groups who quit smoking by the 6-month interview will be compared.
Tobacco smoking is the leading cause of preventable death. Considerable public health
efforts are ongoing Canada-wide to reduce the prevalence of smoking in the general
population. From 1985 to 2005, smoking rates among adults reduced from 35% to 19%. However,
since that time, this steady rate of decline plateaued at around 18-19%. What else can be
done to continue to significantly reduce the number of smokers at the population level? One
option is to translate interventions that have demonstrated clinical efficacy into
population level initiatives. Nicotine Replacement Therapy (NRT) has a considerable research
base demonstrating its efficacy. Public health initiatives are underway to distribute NRT
widely through mass distribution efforts. For example, over 58,000 NRT treatments have been
distributed in the province of Ontario alone, and other provinces in Canada are considering
adopting mass distribution procedures. However, one important question remains unanswered -
do smoking cessation programs that involve mass distribution of free NRT work? Preliminary
evidence consisting of before-after smoking status data from participants of mass NRT
campaigns yielded promising results. However, such data cannot be used to make causal
statements about the impact of NRT distribution. To answer this question, a randomized
controlled trial is required.
A single blinded, panel survey design with random assignment to an experimental and a
control condition will be used in this study. A two-stage recruitment process will be
employed, in the context of a general population survey with two follow-ups (8 weeks and 6
months). Random digit dialing of Canadian home telephone numbers will identify households
with adult smokers who are willing to take part in a smoking study that involves three
interviews, with saliva collection for 3-HC/cotinine ratio measurement at baseline and
saliva cotinine verification at 8-week and 6-month follow-ups.
As part of the baseline survey, eligible subjects will be identified for the second
recruitment - randomization of smokers into experimental and control conditions to receive
versus not receive nicotine patches. Eligibility will be determined by a series of questions
regarding hypothetical interest in nicotine patches to quit smoking (including willingness
to have nicotine patches sent to their home) and having no contraindications for using NRT.
A randomized half of the eligible subjects will be assigned to the experimental condition
and asked for their permission to have nicotine patches sent to their home. Subjects will be
followed-up at 8 weeks and 6 months. Subjects in the control condition will not be offered
nicotine patches. Interviewers will be blind to subjects' condition because they will be
using computer assisted telephone interviewing (CATI) technology and as the first parts of
the 8-week and 6-month follow-ups are identical for experimental and control conditions,
they will not know the intervention condition to which a subject belongs until questions
specific to the use of NRT are asked near the end of the surveys (i.e., after the primary
outcome measures are assessed).
The primary hypothesis is that subjects who receive nicotine patches at baseline will
display significantly higher quit rates (as assessed by 30 day point prevalence of
abstinence from tobacco) at 6-month follow-up as compared to subjects who do not receive
nicotine patches at baseline.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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