Respiratory Medicine
Volume 104, Issue 1 , Pages 61-66, January 2010

Smoking cessation in patients requiring bronchoscopy: The Bronchoscopy AntiSmoking Study (BASIS)

  • Paola Martucci

      Affiliations

    • UOC Endoscopia Bronchiale e Urgenze Broncologiche, AORN A. Cardarelli, Napoli, Italy
  • ,
  • Piersante Sestini

      Affiliations

    • Clinica Malattie dell'Apparato Respiratorio, Università Di Siena, Siena, Italy
  • ,
  • Pier Aldo Canessa

      Affiliations

    • Divisione di Pneumologia, Ospedale S. Bartolomeo, Sarzana (SP), Italy
  • ,
  • Luigi Brancaccio

      Affiliations

    • II UOC Pneumologia Oncologica, AO V. Monaldi, Napoli, Italy
  • ,
  • Carmen Guarino

      Affiliations

    • Dipartimento Medico Chirurgico di Oncologia e Patologia Toracica, 2^ Università degli Studi di Napoli, Napoli, Italy
  • ,
  • Natalino Barbato

      Affiliations

    • Divisione di Pneumologia, Ospedale G. da Procida, Salerno, Italy
  • ,
  • Marco Lodi

      Affiliations

    • UO Malattie dell'Apparato Respiratorio, Ospedale di Copparo (FE), Italy
  • ,
  • Isotta Coloretti

      Affiliations

    • UOS di Pneumologia, Ospedale C.Magati AUSL Reggio Emilia, Scandiano (RE), Italy
  • ,
  • Mario Del Donno

      Affiliations

    • UOC Pneumologia, AO G Rummo, Benevento, Italy
  • ,
  • Albino Sini

      Affiliations

    • UOC Pneumologia, AO S.Filippo Neri, Roma, Italy
  • ,
  • Cristina Cinti

      Affiliations

    • UOC Pneumologia, AUSL Bologna, Italy
  • ,
  • Andrea S. Melani

      Affiliations

    • Centro Antifumo Fisiopatologia e Riabilitazione Respiratoria, Policlinico Le Scotte, AO Universitaria Senese, Viale Bracci, I-53100 Siena, Italy
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +39 577 586760; fax: +39 577 586196.
  • ,
  • on behalf of the Associazione Italiana Pneumologi Ospedalieri – Educational Group

Received 17 November 2008; accepted 7 August 2009. published online 02 September 2009.

Summary 

We investigated the readiness to quit and the smoking cessation rates of smokers requring bronchoscopy and receiving advice quitting. This randomized controlled trial evaluated the effectiveness of two smoking cessation interventions, either a brief advice (control group), or a longer support, delivered at the time of bronchoscopy.

We consecutively enrolled 233 adult smokers, regardless of the initial level of motivation to quit. Their mean (SD) age was 57 (12) years; males were 192. They had smoked a median of 44.5 pack-years. Their mean (SD) Fagerstrom score was 8 (2). There was no difference between groups. Surprisingly, 45% of participants were in the action stage at baseline; these 105 subjects had quit in the week immediately prior to the bronchoscopy. At 6- and 12-months follow-up visits, respectively 41% and 29% of participants in the intervention group and 27% and 13% in the control group objectively showed a 1-week point prevalence abstinence. The difference was significant at 6 months (p<0.05) but not at 1-year visit (p=0.052), even if there was a trend towards greater cessation rate in the intervention group. In multivariable logistic models, at the final visit being a quitter was positively associated with having been in the action stage at baseline and negatively with the Fagerstrom score and the presence of smokers in household.

We conclude that the time of bronchoscopy may possibly predispose smokers to quit. Further efforts are needed to clear whether more protracted support might achieve higher long-term smoking cessation rates.

Keywords: Smoking cessation advice, Bronchoscopy, Quitting rate, Nicotine dependence

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 This setting may be an opportunity to reach smokers at a time when they may be more receptive to advice quitting due to the perceived vulnerability related to a potential smoking related disease.

PII: S0954-6111(09)00257-1

doi:10.1016/j.rmed.2009.08.002

Respiratory Medicine
Volume 104, Issue 1 , Pages 61-66, January 2010