Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
This randomized controlled trial compares the effectiveness for both smoking cessation and weight control of two alternative combined interventions offered via telephone quitline, as compared to standard of care quitline treatment addressing cessation alone. The interventions to be compared are cessation treatment alone versus cessation treatment combined with weight control treatment added either simultaneously or sequentially.
Full description
Cigarette smoking and obesity are the leading causes of preventable morbidity and mortality in the U.S. Quitting smoking can lead to weight gain and obesity-related co-morbidities. Quitlines provide a natural population-based laboratory to test innovative approaches to help people quit smoking and control their weight. However, there is a lack of understanding of the effectiveness of intervening on both smoking and weight at the same time. Thus, we propose to test the impact on abstinence and weight control of adding an evidence-based weight control intervention simultaneously with or sequentially (following) cessation treatment via telephone quitlines.
This study, modeled on Co-I Dr. Bonnie Springs successful efficacy trial, is the first attempt to replicate the findings using widely available phone and web-based programs. The cessation program will be the effective and cost effective Quit For Life® quitline operated by Alere Wellbeing. The weight management program will be the Weight Talk program operated by Alere Wellbeing, also shown to be feasible, acceptable and effective in producing positive changes in weight, eating behaviors and physical activity. We will be using 5 calls from the Weight Talk program for the intervention content for the simultaneous and sequential arms.
The proposed randomized controlled trial compares the effectiveness for both smoking cessation and weight control of two alternative combined interventions offered via telephone quitline, as compared to standard of care quitline treatment addressing cessation alone. The interventions to be compared are cessation treatment alone versus cessation treatment combined with weight control treatment added either simultaneously or sequentially. We propose to recruit 2550 smokers who call a quitline and randomly assign them to one of three groups: (a) Standard Care (STD): cessation treatment calls (5 proactive calls with a quit coach followed by 5 contact control calls); (b) Simultaneous: weight control treatment simultaneous with cessation treatment (5 proactive calls with a quit coach combined with weight coach/nutritionist followed by 5 'contact control calls'), or (c) Sequential: weight control treatment added after cessation treatment (5 proactive calls with a quit coach followed by 5 weight coach/nutritionist calls). All three interventions include a total of 10 phone counseling calls, interactive web, mailed support materials, access to nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) and unlimited participant-initiated calls.
Significance: This study is novel. Combining two phone/web based behavior change programs together has never been tested. A cost-effective, population-based strategy for delivering a combined smoking cessation and weight control intervention stands to make a significant impact. The option of new telephone counseling that helps smokers quit and control their weight could encourage smokers to call quitlines who otherwise might not because they are concerned about gaining weight. Combined smoking and weight treatment could also increase abstinence rates over current best-practice treatment and do so without weight gained its adverse consequences. Moreover, if effective, the intervention could rapidly be disseminated to the 500,000 smokers who use quitlines annually in the U.S., a large proportion of whom are obese.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
2,540 participants in 3 patient groups
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal