Abstract
Background and aimIt is useful, for theoretical and practical reasons, to be able to specify functions for continuous abstinence over time in smoking cessation attempts. This study aimed to find the best‐fitting models of mean proportion abstinent with different smoking cessation pharmacotherapies up to 52 weeks from the quit date.MethodsWe searched the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews to identify randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of pharmacological treatments to aid smoking cessation. For comparability, we selected trials that provided 12 weeks of treatment. Continuous abstinence rates for each treatment at each follow‐up point in trials were extracted along with methodological details of the trial. Data points for each pharmacotherapy at each follow‐up point were aggregated where the total across contributing studies included at least 1000 participants per data point. Continuous abstinence curves were modelled using a range of different functions from the quit date to 52‐week follow‐up. Models were compared for fit using R 2 and Bayesian information criterion (BIC).ResultsStudies meeting our selection criteria covered three pharmacotherapies [varenicline, nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) and bupropion] and placebo. Power functions provided the best fit (R 2 > 0.99, BIC < 17.0) to continuous abstinence curves from the target quit date in all cases except for varenicline, where a logarithmic function described the curve best (R 2 = 0.99, BIC = 21.2). At 52 weeks, abstinence rates were 22.5% (23.0% modelled) for varenicline, 16.7% (16.0% modelled) for bupropion, 13.0% (12.4% modelled) for NRT and 8.3% (8.9% modelled) for placebo. For varenicline, bupropion, NRT and placebo, respectively, 55.9, 65.0, 62.3 and 56.5% of participants who were abstinent at the end of treatment were still abstinent at 52 weeks.ConclusionsMean continuous abstinence rates up to 52 weeks from initiation of smoking cessation attempts in clinical trials can be modelled using simple power functions for placebo, nicotine replacement therapy and bupropion and a logarithmic function for varenicline. This allows accurate prediction of abstinence rates from any time point to any other time point up to 52 weeks.
Highlights
Continuous abstinence rates after initiation of a smoking quit attempt follow a negatively decelerating curve over time [1]
The shape of the continuous abstinence curve was similar throughout the different pharmacotherapies, with relapse rates highest in the initial 3–4 weeks and slowly tapering off after the end of treatment
Comparison of model selection statistics (Table 2) indicated that continuous abstinence data for bupropion, nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) and placebo could best be described by a power function, while the best-fitting curve for varenicline was logarithmic (R2 = 0.99)
Summary
Continuous abstinence rates after initiation of a smoking quit attempt follow a negatively decelerating curve over time [1] This is a common pattern with attempts to stop engaging in addictive behaviours [2]. This paper synthesizes evidence from clinical trials of pharmacotherapies in smoking cessation to derive best-fitting, up-to-date models of mean continuous abstinence rates as a function of time since the quit attempt started. It is useful, for theoretical and practical reasons, to be able to specify functions for continuous abstinence over time in smoking cessation attempts. This study aimed to find the best-fitting models of mean proportion abstinent with different smoking cessation pharmacotherapies up to 52 weeks from the quit date
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