Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer mortality in the U.S. and a well-known health consequence of cigarette smoking. The diagnosis of late stage lung cancer has a profound effect on patients and their families and may be particularly impactful for relatives who smoke. Proposed is a two-arm randomized intervention trial that targets late stage lung cancer patients' relatives who smoke. Patients newly diagnosed with lung cancer at stages IIIb or IV who are initiating care at three large thoracic oncology units (Duke, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and Durham VA) will be identified weekly from automated databases. These patients (approximately 950 over a two-year period) will be surveyed by telephone to enumerate their relatives who smoke and request permission to contact these relatives. Eligible relatives will be contacted to request their participation in the intervention trial. Those who agree to participate and complete the baseline survey will be stratified, based on the number of eligible relatives enumerated, and randomly assigned to either a Standard Self-help arm (n=240) or a Coping-focused Self-help arm (n=240). Relatives in the Standard Self-help arm will be sent an introductory letter signed by the patient's oncologist, a smoking cessation kit (e.g., nicotine patches, relaxation tapes) and a tailored booklet. Relatives in the Coping-focused arm will receive a 12-week intervention that includes the same components described above plus 6 calls from a counselor. The objective of the Coping-focused intervention is to help smokers reduce emotional distress by teaching them approach-oriented coping (e.g., relaxation techniques, reframing self-defeating appraisals, use of self-help cessation aids) and discourage avoidant-oriented coping (e.g., distancing and denial of personal benefits of smoking cessation) to enhance their ability to take steps toward quitting. The primary outcome of the trial is biochemically confirmed 7-day point prevalent abstinence at the three follow-ups, 2 weeks, 6- and 12- months post-treatment. In addition, changes in mediating factors including coping strategies and self- efficacy related to emotion management and smoking cessation and their association with intervention outcomes will be analyzed. Lastly, cost-effectiveness of the two intervention approaches also will be evaluated.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Project--Cooperative Agreements (U01)
Project #
5U01CA092622-05
Application #
7262987
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-SNEM-1 (01))
Program Officer
Morgan, Glen D
Project Start
2003-05-10
Project End
2010-04-30
Budget Start
2007-05-10
Budget End
2010-04-30
Support Year
5
Fiscal Year
2007
Total Cost
$544,526
Indirect Cost
Name
Duke University
Department
Internal Medicine/Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
044387793
City
Durham
State
NC
Country
United States
Zip Code
27705
McBride, Colleen M; Blocklin, Michelle; Lipkus, Isaac M et al. (2017) Patient's lung cancer diagnosis as a cue for relatives' smoking cessation: evaluating the constructs of the teachable moment. Psychooncology 26:88-95
Bastian, Lori A; Fish, Laura J; Peterson, Bercedis L et al. (2013) Assessment of the impact of adjunctive proactive telephone counseling to promote smoking cessation among lung cancer patients' social networks. Am J Health Promot 27:181-90
Bastian, Lori A (2011) Pain and smoking among cancer patients: the relationship is complex but the clinical implication is clear. Pain 152:10-1
Bastian, Lori A; Fish, Laura J; Peterson, Bercedis L et al. (2011) Proactive recruitment of cancer patients' social networks into a smoking cessation trial. Contemp Clin Trials 32:498-504
Sanderson, S C; O'Neill, S C; Bastian, L A et al. (2010) What can interest tell us about uptake of genetic testing? Intention and behavior amongst smokers related to patients with lung cancer. Public Health Genomics 13:116-24
Bastian, Lori A; Sherman, Scott E (2010) Effects of the wars on smoking among veterans. J Gen Intern Med 25:102-3
Bastian, Lori A (2009) If it is as simple as AAAAA B C, why don't we do it? J Gen Intern Med 24:284-5
Daniel, Marcella; Keefe, Francis J; Lyna, Pauline et al. (2009) Persistent smoking after a diagnosis of lung cancer is associated with higher reported pain levels. J Pain 10:323-8
Bastian, Lori A (2008) Smoking cessation for hospital patients: an opportunity to increase the reach of effective smoking cessation programs. J Gen Intern Med 23:1286-7
O'Neill, Suzanne C; White, Della Brown; Sanderson, Saskia C et al. (2008) The feasibility of online genetic testing for lung cancer susceptibility: uptake of a web-based protocol and decision outcomes. Genet Med 10:121-30

Showing the most recent 10 out of 11 publications