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A smoking cessation smartphone app that delivers real-time 'context aware' behavioural support: the Quit Sense feasibility RCT.

Naughton, Felix; Hope, Aimie; Siegele-Brown, Chloë; Grant, Kelly; Notley, Caitlin; Colles, Antony; West, Claire; Mascolo, Cecilia; Coleman, Tim; Barton, Garry; Shepstone, Lee; Prevost, Toby; Sutton, Stephen; Crane, David; Greaves, Felix; High, Juliet

A smoking cessation smartphone app that delivers real-time 'context aware' behavioural support: the Quit Sense feasibility RCT. Thumbnail


Authors

Felix Naughton

Aimie Hope

Chloë Siegele-Brown

Kelly Grant

Caitlin Notley

Antony Colles

Claire West

Cecilia Mascolo

TIM COLEMAN tim.coleman@nottingham.ac.uk
Professor of Primary Care

Garry Barton

Lee Shepstone

Toby Prevost

Stephen Sutton

David Crane

Felix Greaves

Juliet High



Abstract

During a quit attempt, cues from a smoker's environment are a major cause of brief smoking lapses, which increase the risk of relapse. Quit Sense is a theory-guided Just-In-Time Adaptive Intervention smartphone app, providing smokers with the means to learn about their environmental smoking cues and provides 'in the moment' support to help them manage these during a quit attempt. To undertake a feasibility randomised controlled trial to estimate key parameters to inform a definitive randomised controlled trial of Quit Sense. A parallel, two-arm randomised controlled trial with a qualitative process evaluation and a 'Study Within A Trial' evaluating incentives on attrition. The research team were blind to allocation except for the study statistician, database developers and lead researcher. Participants were not blind to allocation. Online with recruitment, enrolment, randomisation and data collection (excluding manual telephone follow-up) automated through the study website. Smokers (323 screened, 297 eligible, 209 enrolled) recruited via online adverts on Google search, Facebook and Instagram. Participants were allocated to 'usual care' arm (  = 105; text message referral to the National Health Service SmokeFree website) or 'usual care' plus Quit Sense (  = 104), via a text message invitation to install the Quit Sense app. Follow-up at 6 weeks and 6 months post enrolment was undertaken by automated text messages with an online questionnaire link and, for non-responders, by telephone. Definitive trial progression criteria were met if a priori thresholds were included in or lower than the 95% confidence interval of the estimate. Measures included health economic and outcome data completion rates (progression criterion #1 threshold: ≥ 70%), including biochemical validation rates (progression criterion #2 threshold: ≥ 70%), recruitment costs, app installation (progression criterion #3 threshold: ≥ 70%) and engagement rates (progression criterion #4 threshold: ≥ 60%), biochemically verified 6-month abstinence and hypothesised mechanisms of action and participant views of the app (qualitative). Self-reported smoking outcome completion rates were 77% (95% confidence interval 71% to 82%) and health economic data (resource use and quality of life) 70% (95% CI 64% to 77%) at 6 months. Return rate of viable saliva samples for abstinence verification was 39% (95% CI 24% to 54%). The per-participant recruitment cost was £19.20, which included advert (£5.82) and running costs (£13.38). In the Quit Sense arm, 75% (95% CI 67% to 83%; 78/104) installed the app and, of these, 100% set a quit date within the app and 51% engaged with it for more than 1 week. The rate of 6-month biochemically verified sustained abstinence, which we anticipated would be used as a primary outcome in a future study, was 11.5% (12/104) in the Quit Sense arm and 2.9% (3/105) in the usual care arm (estimated effect size: adjusted odds ratio = 4.57, 95% CIs 1.23 to 16.94). There was no evidence of between-arm differences in hypothesised mechanisms of action. Three out of four progression criteria were met. The Study Within A Trial analysis found a £20 versus £10 incentive did not significantly increase follow-up rates though reduced the need for manual follow-up and increased response speed. The process evaluation identified several potential pathways to abstinence for Quit Sense, factors which led to disengagement with the app, and app improvement suggestions. Biochemical validation rates were lower than anticipated and imbalanced between arms. COVID-19-related restrictions likely limited opportunities for Quit Sense to provide location tailored support. The trial design and procedures demonstrated feasibility and evidence was generated supporting the efficacy potential of Quit Sense. Progression to a definitive trial is warranted providing improved biochemical validation rates. This trial is registered as ISRCTN12326962. This award was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Public Health Research programme (NIHR award ref: 17/92/31) and is published in full in ; Vol. 12, No. 4. See the NIHR Funding and Awards website for further award information.

Citation

Naughton, F., Hope, A., Siegele-Brown, C., Grant, K., Notley, C., Colles, A., …High, J. (2024). A smoking cessation smartphone app that delivers real-time 'context aware' behavioural support: the Quit Sense feasibility RCT. Public Health Research, 12(4), 1-99. https://doi.org/10.3310/KQYT5412

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Mar 1, 2023
Publication Date May 12, 2024
Deposit Date May 2, 2024
Publicly Available Date May 2, 2024
Journal Public health research (Southampton, England)
Print ISSN 2050-4381
Publisher NIHR Journals Library
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 12
Issue 4
Pages 1-99
DOI https://doi.org/10.3310/KQYT5412
Keywords MHEALTH, Feasibility Studies, Smartphone, Male, BEHAVIOUR CHANGE, JUST-IN-TIME ADAPTIVE INTERVENTION (JITAI), SMOKING CESSATION, Middle Aged, Mobile Applications, Humans, Smoking Cessation - methods - psychology, Female, SMARTPHONE APP, Adult
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/34345907
Publisher URL https://www.journalslibrary.nihr.ac.uk/phr/KQYT5412#/abstract