The provision of
smoking cessation counselling and therapy during routine HIV care increases the
chances that patients will stop smoking and stay stopped, according to Swiss
research published in HIV Medicine.
Physicians at the
Zurich HIV clinic received training about smoking cessation counselling and the
use of medication to help those wanting to quit.
Compared to other
patients in the Swiss HIV Cohort, people who received their care in Zurich
were more likely to stop smoking and also less likely to restart smoking after
they had quit.
The Zurich doctors
were able to successfully integrate smoking cessation support into routine
clinic appointments.
Cardiovascular disease
is an increasingly important cause of illness and death in patients with HIV.
The largest modifiable risk factor for cardiovascular disease is smoking.
Compared to individuals in the general population, patients with HIV are
significantly more likely to smoke.
Although a significant
majority of all smokers wish to stop, only a minority succeed. Approximately a
fifth of those trying to stop smoking receive specialist support in the form of
counselling or supportive drug therapy. Doctors who have been trained how to
support patients who wish to stop smoking are more likely to offer referrals to
counsellors or prescribe supportive drug therapy.
Little information is
available on how smoking cessation is handled in HIV care.
Therefore, between 2007
and 2009, all doctors at the HIV treatment centre in Zurich were provided with
specialist training about the role of counselling and drug support in smoking
cessation. The investigators hypothesised that the patients of these doctors
would be more likely to stop smoking than patients at other HIV treatment
centres in Switzerland.
The training lasted
half a day and was provided by the Swiss Lung Foundation. It provided
information on the identification of smokers, nicotine dependence, nicotine
withdrawal, motivation stages, methods of counselling and pharmacological
support.
A total of 1689
patients received care at the Zurich treatment centre and 11056 in the Swiss
Cohort during the study.
No centre other than
the Zurich clinic offered structured smoking cessation support.
Physicians at the
Zurich clinic included smoking cessation in 80% of consultations for current
smokers.
Prevalence of smoking
in the entire Swiss Cohort fell from 60% in 2000 to 43% in 2010.
In 2000, 64% of patients
in Zurich smoked. This had fallen by 23% by 2010, somewhat greater than the 16%
decline recorded in the Swiss Cohort overall.
Just before the start
of the study in 2007, the incidence of smoking cessation among the Zurich
patients was 6.1 per 100 person years. This had increased to 10.8 per 100
person years in 2010. The corresponding figures for the Swiss Cohort were 4.4
and 6.2 per 100 person years respectively.
Incidence of relapse
among former smokers at the Zurich clinic fell dramatically over the period of
the study from 8.7 per 100 person years in 2007 to 2.9 per 100 person years in
2010. Incidence at other treatment centres were largely unchanged at 10.9 and
9.2 per 100 person years in 2007 and 2010.
The investigators
calculated that patients at the Zurich clinic were approximately 25% more
likely to stop smoking than patients receiving care at other Swiss centres (OR
= 1.23; 95% CI, 1.07-1.42, p = 0.004). Patients in Zurich who managed to quit
were also significantly less likely to start smoking again than patients at
other centres (OR = 0.75; 95% CI, 0.61-0.92, p = 0.007).
The effect of the
intervention remained significant even after controlling for calendar year.
Injecting drug users
and heavy drinkers were significantly less likely to stop smoking (p < 0.001).
So too were patients who were either undergoing psychiatric treatment or who
had depression (p = 0.03). The same factors were associated with relapse after
smoking cessation. In contrast, patients with a history of cardiovascular
disease were less likely to relapse after quitting (p = 0.005).
“Smoking cessation
should be a topic of discussion in any physician-patient contact,” conclude the
investigators. “Our approach of an institution-wide training programme for infectious
diseases physicians to improve smoking cessation counselling can be well
integrated into routine HIV care, was well accepted by patients and physicians,
and can support patients’ efforts to stop smoking.”