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The purpose of this study is to determine the efficacy, acceptability, and feasibility of an intervention that provides a behavioral weight gain prevention intervention in advance of smoking cessation treatment in individuals with overweight or obesity who smoke cigarettes. The primary aim of this study is to determine feasibility and acceptability and initial efficacy regarding whether preceding 8 weeks of smoking cessation treatment with 8 weeks of self-regulation strategies + large changes for weight gain prevention (SR), compared to 8 weeks of healthy lifestyle education (LE), will result in greater smoking cessation and reduced weight gain. Secondary aims are to study effects on self-efficacy for managing weight and for quitting smoking, negative affect, and delayed reward discounting. Methods: Individuals with overweight or obesity who smoke cigarettes will participate in a 16-week group-based multiple health behavior change intervention. Groups will be randomly assigned to receive either 8 weeks of SR followed by 8 weeks of smoking cessation treatment or 8 weeks of LE followed by 8 weeks of smoking cessation treatment. Smoking cessation treatment in both conditions will include counseling and combination nicotine replacement therapy (patch + lozenges), with a quit day at week 9 of the 16-week intervention. Assessments will occur at baseline, on quit day and 1, 2, and 3 months later. Determining the viability of this strategy in terms of effects on both smoking and weight has high significance to public health.
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Aims - The specific aims are to examine: (1) the feasibility, acceptability, and initial efficacy of using self-regulation strategies for weight gain prevention (SR), relative to the provision of healthy lifestyle education (LE), prior to smoking cessation treatment in a pilot study; (2) compare the effect of self-regulation strategies for weight gain prevention (SR), relative to the provision of healthy lifestyle education (LE), prior to smoking cessation treatment, on mechanisms thought to underlie smoking abstinence. Mechanisms include self-efficacy for managing weight and for quitting smoking, negative affect, and delayed reward discounting.
Methodology - A randomized trial will be used to test the feasibility, acceptability, and initial efficacy of using self-regulation strategies for weight gain prevention prior to smoking cessation treatment. Eligible participants will complete baseline assessment and be randomly assigned to one of two conditions. Participants assigned to the SR condition will receive 8 weeks of self-regulation strategies + large changes for weight gain prevention, followed by 8 weeks of smoking cessation treatment. Participants assigned to the LE condition will receive 8 weeks of healthy lifestyle education, followed by 8 weeks of smoking cessation treatment. The intervention will be delivered using a group-based format and will last 16 weeks. Random assignment will occur at the group level. Participants will receive nicotine replacement therapy and counseling as part of the smoking cessation intervention and will quit smoking as a group halfway through treatment (week 9). Assessments will occur at baseline, on quit day (week 9), 1 month after quit day (week 13), 2 months after quit day (week 17), and 3 months after quit day (week 21). Approximately 30 participants will be assigned to each condition (study N=60).
Participant Population - Individuals with overweight or obesity who smoke cigarettes
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55 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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