Immediately scheduled for an appointment to smoking cessation clinics: Key to quitting smoking in chronic airway disease – a multicenter randomized study

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info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessTarih
2025Yazar
Karadoğan, DilekTelatar, Tahsin Gökhan
Kaya, İlknur
Atlı, Siahmet
Kabil, Neslihan Köse
Marım, Feride
Şenel, Merve Yumrukuz
Yüksel, Aycan
Yalçın, Burcu
Gültekin, Ökkeş
Erçelik, Merve
Akgün, Metin
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Karadoğan, D., Telatar, T. G., Kaya, İ., Atlı, S., Köse Kabil, N., Marım, F., Yumrukuz Şenel, M., Yüksel, A., Yalçın, B., Gültekin, Ö., Erçelik, M., & Akgün, M. (2025). Immediately scheduled for an appointment to smoking cessation clinics: Key to quitting smoking in chronic airway disease – a multicenter randomized study. Tobacco Induced Diseases, 23, 76. https://doi.org/10.18332/tid/204254Özet
INTRODUCTION A significant proportion of patients with chronic airway diseases continue to smoke even after the diagnosis. In addition, smoking cessation support continues to be a neglected issue in real-life settings by physicians for that patient group. Therefore, in our search for a solution to this issue, we conducted our study to evaluate the effect of arranging immediate appointments to smoking cessation outpatient clinics on smoking cessation success in patients with chronic airway disease. METHODS This multicenter, randomized, parallel-arm prospective study (NCT05764343) was conducted in pulmonary outpatient clinics between November 2022 and June 2023. Current smoker patients aged ≥18 years diagnosed with COPD, asthma, or bronchiectasis for at least 6 months were included and sequentially randomized in a 1:1 ratio. Both arms received brief smoking cessation interventions, and the intervention arm had immediate access to a smoking cessation clinic appointment. In contrast, the control arm received a standard quitline appointment for routine service. The primary endpoint was the self-reported smoking cessation rate at 3 months, analyzed using an intention-to-treat approach. RESULTS The study comprised 198 patients in the immediate appointment arm and 199 in the usual care arm. The quit rate was significantly higher in the immediate appointment arm (26.7%) than in the usual care arm (16.5%, p=0.014). Access to smoking cessation medication was 69.3% in the intervention group against 22.0% in the control group (p<0.001). Multivariable analysis identified access to smoking cessation medication as the sole significant predictor of cessation success at 3 months (adjusted odds ratio, AOR=5.64; 95% CI: 2.89–11.03). CONCLUSIONS Our study revealed that access to evidence-based smoking cessation support is positively associated with successful quitting. Compared to the usual care arm, the immediately appointment-scheduled arm has a higher access rate of cessation support. Therefore, smoking cessation support, including pharmacotherapy, should be part of routine care for patients with chronic airway diseases.