Abstract

BackgroundEven after quitting illicit drugs, tobacco abuse remains a major cause of morbidity and mortality in former injection drug users. An important unmet need in this population is to have effective interventions that can be used in the context of community based care. Contingency management, where a patient receives a monetary incentive for healthy behavior choices, and incorporation of individual counseling regarding spirometric “lung age” (the age of an average healthy individual with similar spirometry) have been shown to improve cessation rates in some populations. The efficacy of these interventions on improving smoking cessation rates has not been studied among current and former injection drug users.MethodsIn a randomized, factorial design study, we recruited 100 active smokers from an ongoing cohort study of current and former injection drug users to assess the impact of contingency management and spirometric lung age on smoking cessation. The primary outcome was 6-month biologically-confirmed smoking cessation comparing contingency management, spirometric lung age or both to usual care. Secondary outcomes included differences in self-reported and biologically-confirmed cessation at interim visits, number of visits attended and quit attempts, smoking rates at interim visits, and changes in Fagerstrom score and self-efficacy.ResultsSix-month biologically-confirmed smoking cessations rates were 4% usual care, 0% lung age, 14% contingency management and 0% for combined lung age and contingency management (p = 0.13). There were no differences in secondary endpoints comparing the four interventions or when pooling the lung age groups. Comparing contingency management to non-contingency management, 6-month cessation rates were not different (7% vs. 2%; p = 0.36), but total number of visits with exhaled carbon monoxide-confirmed abstinence were higher for contingency management than non-contingency management participants (0.38 vs. 0.06; p = 0.03), and more contingency management participants showed reduction in their Fagerstrom score from baseline to follow-up (39% vs. 18%; p = 0.03).ConclusionsWhile lung age appeared ineffective, contingency management was associated with more short-term abstinence and lowered nicotine addiction. Contingency management may be a useful tool in development of effective tobacco cessation strategies among current and former injection drug users.Trial registrationClinicaltrials.gov NCT01334736 (April 12, 2011).

Highlights

  • Even after quitting illicit drugs, tobacco abuse remains a major cause of morbidity and mortality in former injection drug users

  • Lung age reports spirometry results using the age of an average healthy individual with similar spirometry results (i.e., “You are 50 years old, but you have the lungs of a 70 year old”)

  • The AIDS Linked to the Intravenous Experience (ALIVE) study, a prospective, longitudinal cohort of persons with a history of injecting drugs followed in Baltimore, Maryland since 1988, represents an ideal population to explore novel smoking cessation interventions [27]

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Summary

Introduction

Even after quitting illicit drugs, tobacco abuse remains a major cause of morbidity and mortality in former injection drug users. Contingency management, where a patient receives a monetary incentive for healthy behavior choices, and incorporation of individual counseling regarding spirometric “lung age” (the age of an average healthy individual with similar spirometry) have been shown to improve cessation rates in some populations. The efficacy of these interventions on improving smoking cessation rates has not been studied among current and former injection drug users. The use of lung age as a motivational tool has been shown to improve biologically-confirmed smoking cessation endpoints in community-based clinic populations [25] and perceived smoking-related risks, worries and desire to quit in college smokers [26].

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