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临床试验/NCT03904186
NCT03904186
已完成
不适用

Effectiveness of an Integrated Treatment to Address Smoking Cessation and Anxiety/ Depression in People Living With HIV

Massachusetts General Hospital3 个研究点 分布在 1 个国家目标入组 131 人2019年12月19日

概览

阶段
不适用
干预措施
QUIT
疾病 / 适应症
Human Immunodeficiency Virus
发起方
Massachusetts General Hospital
入组人数
131
试验地点
3
主要终点
Short-Term Point Prevalence Smoking Abstinence
状态
已完成
最后更新
2个月前

概览

简要总结

Smokers living with HIV represent a major health disparity population in the United States and the world more generally. Major contributing factors to the maintenance and relapse of smoking among smokers living with HIV include increased exposure to multiple stressors associated with HIV, which often exacerbates anxiety/depression. In a previous project, the feasibility, acceptability, and initial efficacy of a 9-session, cognitive-behavioral-based intervention to address smoking cessation by reducing anxiety and depression via specific emotional vulnerabilities (anxiety sensitivity, distress tolerance, and anhedonia) was tested against an enhanced standard of care in a pilot randomized controlled trial (NCT01393301). It was found that when compared to a brief enhanced treatment as usual control, patients in the intervention achieved higher short-term and long-term smoking abstinence rates. In this project, the investigators seek to test this same intervention in a fully powered, 3-arm efficacy/effectiveness trial. The goal of this study is to randomize 180 smokers across three sites to test the efficacy/effectiveness of the intervention at increasing point prevalence abstinence by reducing anxiety and depression at a 1-month follow-up (the end of treatment timepoint/ approximately 1-month post quit day) and a 6-month follow-up (approximately 6-months post quit day).

详细描述

Although the prevalence of smoking has declined over the past 50 years, large disparities in tobacco use remain across several subgroups, particularly disadvantaged and health compromised populations. In fact, the initiation and maintenance of smoking is twice as likely for individuals living with HIV than individuals not living with HIV. Smokers living with HIV represent a major health disparity population in the United States (US) and the world more generally, and their unique healthcare needs are not being adequately addressed. For people living with HIV, smoking is related to poorer survival, and among those who are adherent to their antiretroviral treatment regimens, smoking reduces life expectancy more than HIV. A major contributing factor to the maintenance and relapse of smoking among smokers living with HIV is the increased exposure to multiple stressors associated with HIV (e.g., compromised health status, stigma, cognitive impairment), which in turn, contributes to heightened anxiety/depression. Further, smokers living with HIV tend to rely on smoking to regulate their negative mood. As a result, smokers living with HIV require specialty care options that address their unique 'affective needs.' The proposed intervention is informed by the success of a recently completed research project (NCT01393301) in which the feasibility and acceptability of a 9-session, cognitive-behavioral therapy-based intervention to address smoking cessation and symptoms of anxiety and depression by targeting common processes underlying anxiety/depression (distress intolerance, anxiety sensitivity, anhedonia) was tested in a pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT) against an enhanced treatment as usual condition. Investigators named this intervention "QUIT". In the pilot RCT, smoking abstinence was significantly higher in the intervention than in the standard of care control at both the 1-month follow-up (the end-of-treatment timepoint) and the 6-month follow-up, and anxiety and depressive symptom severity was lower in the intervention condition than the control condition at the same timepoints. The present study seeks to conduct a fully powered, 3-arm hybrid efficacy/effectiveness trial, integrating resource utilization and cost-effectiveness analyses. The investigators propose to randomize 180 smokers living with HIV across three implementation sites. Two-fifths of the sample (n = 72) will be randomized to the QUIT intervention; two-fifths (n = 72) to an active, credible time-matched control (TM) and one-fifth (n = 36) to a standard-of-care (SOC) control. The primary outcomes of this study will be point prevalence abstinence at the 1-Month Follow-Up (end of treatment timepoint/ approximately 1-month post quit day) and 6-Month Follow-Up (approximately 6-months post quit day). Changes in anxiety/depressive symptom severity will also be examined, and cost-effectiveness analyses will be conducted.

注册库
clinicaltrials.gov
开始日期
2019年12月19日
结束日期
2025年2月28日
最后更新
2个月前
研究类型
Interventional
研究设计
Parallel
性别
All

研究者

责任方
Principal Investigator
主要研究者

Conall O'Cleirigh

Associate Professor of Psychology

Massachusetts General Hospital

入排标准

入选标准

  • 18-79 years old
  • Daily Smoker
  • Motivated to quit smoking
  • HIV-positive
  • Capability and willingness to give written informed consent

排除标准

  • Habitual use of tobacco products other than cigarettes
  • Untreated or unstable psychiatric disorders
  • Current smoking cessation treatment
  • Cognitive behavioral therapy for anxiety within the past year
  • Insufficient command of the English language

研究组 & 干预措施

QUIT Treatment for Smoking Cessation and Distress Tolerance

Participants in this intervention arm will receive a Cognitive-Behavioral therapy-based intervention for smoking cessation in people living with HIV.

干预措施: QUIT

Time and Intensity-Match Control

Participants in this control arm will receive an intervention matched in time and intensity with the experimental arm.

干预措施: Time-Matched Control (TM)

Standard of Care

At each clinic, routine assessment of smoking status occurs at least annually for patients receiving care, but prescription for pharmacotherapy for smoking cessation and referral for behavioral smoking cessation services are rare. Patients will receive the standard of care at the clinic they attend. SOC patients will also attend the first session that participants in the other sessions receive (pre-randomization), will come to the clinic for assessment only during the weeks lining up with sessions 6-10 for the other conditions, and receive the transdermal nicotine patch for 8 weeks.

结局指标

主要结局

Short-Term Point Prevalence Smoking Abstinence

时间窗: Time frame: 1-Month Follow-Up (end of treatment/approximately 1-month post quit date)

Biologically verified 7-day point prevalence abstinence (PPA). Using the timeline follow-back method (TLFB), participants will self-report the last time they smoked. TLFB results will be biologically verified with carbon monoxide analysis of breath samples (if stated abstinence is between 24 hours and 2 weeks), saliva cotinine (if stated abstinence is 2+ weeks and participant is currently using nicotine replacement therapy), or urine anabasine (if stated abstinence is 2+ weeks and participant is not currently using nicotine replacement therapy).

Long-Term Point Prevalence Smoking Abstinence

时间窗: Time frame: 6-Month Follow-Up (approximately 6-months post quit date)

Biologically verified 7-day point prevalence abstinence (PPA). Using the timeline follow-back method (TLFB), participants will self-report the last time they smoked. TLFB results will be biologically verified with carbon monoxide analysis of breath samples (if stated abstinence is between 24 hours and 2 weeks), saliva cotinine (if stated abstinence is 2+ weeks and participant is currently using nicotine replacement therapy), or urine anabasine (if stated abstinence is 2+ weeks and participant is not currently using nicotine replacement therapy).

研究点 (3)

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