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Assessment of the Effectiveness and Cost-Effectiveness of Tailored Web- and Text-Based Smoking Cessation Support in Primary Care (iQuit in Practice II): Protocol for a Randomized Controlled Trial

Proctor, Joanna; Naughton, Felix; Sloane, Melanie; Hopewell, Sarah; Brimicombe, James; Prevost, Toby; Wislon, Ed; Coleman, Tim; Sutton, Stephen

Assessment of the Effectiveness and Cost-Effectiveness of Tailored Web- and Text-Based Smoking Cessation Support in Primary Care (iQuit in Practice II): Protocol for a Randomized Controlled Trial Thumbnail


Authors

Joanna Proctor

Felix Naughton

Melanie Sloane

Sarah Hopewell

James Brimicombe

Toby Prevost

Ed Wislon

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

Stephen Sutton



Abstract

Background: The prevalence of smoking is declining; however, it continues to be a major public health burden. In England, primary care is the health setting that provides smoking cessation support to most smokers. However, this setting has one of the lowest success rates. The iQuit in practice intervention (iQuit) is a tailored web-based and text message intervention developed for use in primary care consultations as an adjunct to routine smoking cessation support with the aim of increasing success rates. iQuit has demonstrated feasibility, acceptability, and potential effectiveness.

Objective: This definitive trial aims to determine the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of iQuit when used as an adjunct to the usual support provided to patients who wish to quit smoking, compared with usual care alone.

Methods: The iQuit in Practice II trial is a two-arm, parallel-group, randomized controlled trial (RCT) with a 1:1 individual allocation comparing usual care (ie, pharmacotherapy combined with multisession behavioral support)—the control—with usual care plus iQuit—the intervention. Participants were recruited through primary care clinics and talked to a smoking cessation advisor. Participants were randomized during the initial consultation, and those allocated to the intervention group received a tailored advice report and 90 days of text messaging in addition to the standard support provided to all patients.

Results: The primary outcome is self-reported prolonged abstinence biochemically verified using saliva cotinine at 6 months after the quit date. A sample size of 1700 participants, with 850 per arm, would yield 90% power to detect a 4.3% difference in validated quit rates between the groups at the two-sided 5% level of significance. The Cambridge East Research Ethics Committee approved the study in February 2016, and funding for the study was granted from May 2016. In total, 1671 participants were recruited between August 2016 and July 2019. Follow-up for all participants was completed in January 2020. Data analysis will begin in the summer of 2020.

Conclusions: iQuit in Practice II is a definitive, pragmatic RCT assessing whether a digital intervention can augment the impact of routine smoking cessation support in primary care. Previous research has found good acceptability and feasibility for delivering iQuit among smoking cessation advisors working in primary care. If demonstrated to be cost-effective, iQuit could be delivered across primary care and other settings, such as community pharmacies. The potential benefit would likely be highest where less behavioral support is delivered.

Citation

Proctor, J., Naughton, F., Sloane, M., Hopewell, S., Brimicombe, J., Prevost, T., …Sutton, S. (2020). Assessment of the Effectiveness and Cost-Effectiveness of Tailored Web- and Text-Based Smoking Cessation Support in Primary Care (iQuit in Practice II): Protocol for a Randomized Controlled Trial. JMIR Research Protocols, 9(7), Article e17160. https://doi.org/10.2196/17160

Journal Article Type Other
Acceptance Date Mar 30, 2020
Online Publication Date Jul 14, 2020
Publication Date Jul 14, 2020
Deposit Date Apr 2, 2020
Publicly Available Date Jul 16, 2020
Journal JMIR Research Protocols
Electronic ISSN 1929-0748
Publisher JMIR Publications
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 9
Issue 7
Article Number e17160
DOI https://doi.org/10.2196/17160
Keywords Tailored; text messages; advice report; intervention; smoking cessation, iQuit, iQuit in Practice.
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/3611671
Publisher URL https://www.researchprotocols.org/2020/7/e17160/

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