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About
Cigarette smoking is now the leading killer of people with HIV (PWH) in the US, and most cessation strategies tried to date have failed to increase long-term quit rates. An "all or none" approach to smoking cessation in PWH offers little benefit to the large majority of PWH who are unable or unwilling to quit. In this proposal we argue that a harm reduction approach (i.e., cut down, get screened for lung cancer, control your blood pressure and cholesterol) has the potential to yield significant benefits in terms of the private and public health of PWH in the US.
Full description
This will be a single-center, prospective, randomized controlled trial (RCT) enrolling 400 participants who are living with HIV and smoke cigarettes in the Bronx, New York. The vast majority (~85%) of people with HIV (PWH) who smoke and receive intensive cessation treatment combining behavioral and drug treatment (such as varenicline or nicotine patches) continue to smoke. The overall goal of this RCT is to compare a harm reduction (HR) strategy aimed at mitigating the harms of cigarette smoking, such as lung cancer and heart disease, in all PWH smokers, both those who are able to quit and those who continue smoking versus treatment as usual (TAU). All participants will have their blood pressure (BP) and lipid (cholesterol) profile checked at baseline. All participants will complete a questionnaire about their sociodemographic, clinical, and tobacco behavior histories at baseline, 3-months, 6-months, and 9-months. All participants who enroll in the trial will be randomized 1:1 (like a coin-flip) to the HR arm, called EX+/HR in this proposal, or the TAU arm, called EX+/TAU in this proposal. All participants will be offered intensive cessation treatment immediately after enrollment in the form of the BecomeAnEX+ online tobacco treatment program, which includes the web's largest online support community of people trying to quit, and an offer of a 12-week supply of varenicline. This stage of the trial, Stage 1, will extend from enrollment until 90-day post-enrollment. After that, in Stage 2, participants will be informed of their randomization assignment, i.e. to EX+/HR or EX+/TAU. Those who are assigned to EX+/HR will undergo the following: (A patient navigator [PN] will be assigned to each EX+/HR participant in order to facilitate all of the following activities.)
Cardiometabolic (CM) Clinic meets every Friday in the MMC outpatient department, and the PN will, similarly, arrange these appointments. Its mission is to optimize the CM profiles of its patients. This includes BP and lipid control. It is supervised by senior cardiology staff but also employs the services of specialized nursing, a dietitian, and an endocrinologist. Initiation and/or adjustment of antihypertensive medications and lipid management occurs directly in the clinic, with a note sent through the electronic health record (EHR) to the primary care provider. A single episode of brief cessation counseling is done for current smokers. Referrals for additional testing, such as ambulatory BP monitoring are made by the CM Clinic staff. Although the investigators expect few, if any, referrals to originate from the EX+/TAU group, study will log these events, and the clinic staff will be blinded and will not be informed which referred patients are participating in the trial.
Those who are assigned to the EX+/TAU group will undergo the following:
Participants allocated to EX+/TAU will continue to receive care from their primary care providers (PCP). A hard copy of the baseline and follow-up BP and lipid measurements will be delivered to the PCPs. Those who meet CMS criteria for LDCT screening and do not undergo screening during the trial will be offered a referral after their final study visit (these individuals will be eligible to undergo LDCT screening during their participation in the trial if they are referred by their care providers). LDCT screening and CM Clinic referral are fully available in ID Clinic, but they are barely utilized. In the first 6 months of 2021, only one clinic patient, out of more than 3000, completed LDCT screening, and only one clinic patient completed a visit to CM Clinic. As a result, even though LDCT screening and CM Clinic are available to ID Clinic patients, we expect to have good separation between study arms for comparison. The main outcomes to be compared between the two groups are summarized in the Outcome Measures module.
One of the great strengths of this trial is the investigators' partnership with the Cost-Effectiveness of Preventing AIDS Complications (CEPAC) group at the Massachusetts General Hospital. The CEPAC group is a national leader in modeling cost-effectiveness and health impact of treatment strategies for PWH to estimate their effects if deployed on a national level. The investigators will share the cost and outcome data that is accumulated in the course of the trial in order to enable sophisticated cost-effectiveness modeling. If, as the investigators expect, the HR approach is shown to be cost-effective, the modeling algorithms are equipped to estimate the potential number of lung cancer and cardiovascular deaths averted and years of life saved.
Finally, the investigators will employ the RE-AIM (reach, effectiveness, adoption, implementation, maintenance) framework to conduct a rigorous assessment of the practicalities and challenges associated with adopting an HR approach within a clinical setting.
Following an amendment approved by the IRB on 8/7/2025, recruitment efforts will be expanded as follows: a list of patients within the Montefiore Health System HIV Clinical Cohort Database who are classified as current smokers will be obtained through a query of the database conducted by the Einstein Epidemiology Informatics Study Management Unit (EISMU). These individuals will be contacted by telephone and/or mail to inform them of the trial and to offer them the opportunity to undergo screening and enrollment (if eligible).
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400 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Jonathan Shuter, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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