Mobile Health Technology for Personalized Tobacco Cessation Support Among Cancer Survivors in Laos
NCT ID: NCT05253573
Last Updated: 2024-08-28
Study Results
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View full resultsBasic Information
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COMPLETED
PHASE2
80 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2022-04-20
2023-08-31
Brief Summary
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The purpose of this projects to expand our mHealth-based intervention to address the pressing need for smoking cessation among cancer survivors and their caregivers in Lao PDR. In this project, the investigators will further adapt the AT intervention to ensure that its content is comprehensible and relevant to the target populations (i.e., cancer survivors and caregivers). Then, the investigators will conduct a pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT, N=80) to evaluate the preliminary efficacy of the intervention. Cancer survivors and caregivers of both sexes who smoke will be identified via medical records at the Setthathirath Hospital (SH) and Lao National Cancer Center (LNCC) and recruited. Similar to the parent project's design, participants will be randomized to 1 of 2 treatment groups: standard care (SC) or AT. SC consists of brief advice to quit smoking delivered by research staff, self-help written materials, and a 2-week supply of nicotine patches. AT consists of all SC components plus our fully-automated interactive smartphone-based treatment program, personalized and tailored to cancer survivors or caregivers. The primary RCT outcome is biochemically confirmed self-reported 7-day point prevalence abstinence at 3 months post-study enrollment. The specific aims are as follows:
Aim 1: Evaluate the feasibility of AT in cancer survivors and caregivers. Hypothesis (H1): ≥75% of AT content will be viewed/opened as indicated by digital date/time stamp in Insight.
Aim 2: Evaluate the preliminary efficacy of AT in each cancer survivor/caregiver subgroup. Hypothesis (H2): At the 12-week follow-up, 7-day point prevalence abstinence will be higher in the AT (vs. SC) group.
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Detailed Description
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Stage 2: The pilot RCT Participant recruitment. Research staff will review medical records of cancer patients receiving care at the 2 hospitals in the past 2 years, screen for their smoking status documented in the records, and contact those who smoked for further screening. To recruit caregivers, research staff will contact random cancer patients who did not smoke and ask if they have a caregiver and if the caregiver smokes. Given the pilot nature of this study, the investigators propose to recruit independent groups of cancer survivors and caregivers who smoke, i.e., no dyads of smokers, to avoid potential interpersonal interactions.
Baseline assessment. Enrolled participants will complete a 45-minute baseline self- or assisted interview, managed and delivered by REDCap. Participants will be randomly assigned to SC or AT by the REDCap randomization module (simple, 1:1). Smartphones will be loaned to participants as needed. All participants will complete a brief training session on smartphone use and the Insight app. The Insight app also includes a help button for instructions on how to use each feature, which participants can review at any time.
Treatment groups. SC consists of brief advice to quit smoking delivered by research staff, self-help written materials (the WHO's "A guide for tobacco users to quit" that the investigators have translated to and validated in Lao), and a 2-week supply of NRT (transdermal patches). AT consists of all SC components plus a fully automated smartphone-based JITAI that involves proactive, interactive, and personalized messages, images, or videos in Lao. Adapted from the parent study and based on the PBM, AT content is designed to increase motivation, self-efficacy, and use of coping skills and reduce nicotine withdrawal symptoms and stress. AT will begin immediately after enrollment and continue for 12 weeks (about 2 messages/images/videos per day, delivered at participants' preferred time). Quit date is set at day 14 post-enrollment for AT and SC participants. JITAI content for AT participants each week will be personalized and tailored to each participant's baseline information (e.g., sex, cancer types, caregiver status, and current health conditions), current PBM phase, and responses to the brief weekly EMAs that drive AT (see Measures). Our AT only targets cigarette smoking because it is the most common type of tobacco used by Lao smokers (95%).
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
SINGLE
Study Groups
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Automated Treatment
AT consists of all SC components plus a fully automated smartphone-based JITAI that involves proactive, interactive, and personalized messages, images, or videos in Lao.
Nicotine patch
Provision of nicotine replacement medications in the form of transdermal patches is important to address nicotine withdrawal/craving for smokers who want to quit. Evidence supporting the safety and efficacy of NRT is vast. The PHS Guideline indicates that use of NRT doubles quit rates and should be considered the minimal standard care. Therefore, we will provide NRT to all participants in both groups in the early cessation phase.
Self-help materials (to support smoking cessation)
Our team has translated and validated the World Health Organization's "A guide for tobacco users to quit" into Lao language for use as the self-help material in this study.
Smartphone-based automated treatment for smoking cessation
The automated treatment(AT) include text messages, images, and videos. The AT content is designed to tap the theoretical mechanisms described in the Phase-Based Model (PBM). That is, treatment content is designed to increase motivation, self-efficacy, use of coping skills, and social support, while reducing nicotine withdrawal symptoms and stress. The AT will begin immediately after enrollment and continue for a 12-week period. The AT approach allows for several levels of personalization for each participant, including tailoring to participants' specific health conditions, individual cessation phases, and participants' self-efficacy level or smoking status in the past week.
Standard Care
SC consists of brief advice to quit smoking delivered by research staff, self-help written materials (the WHO's "A guide for tobacco users to quit" that we have translated to and validated in Lao), and a 2-week supply of NRT (transdermal patches).
Nicotine patch
Provision of nicotine replacement medications in the form of transdermal patches is important to address nicotine withdrawal/craving for smokers who want to quit. Evidence supporting the safety and efficacy of NRT is vast. The PHS Guideline indicates that use of NRT doubles quit rates and should be considered the minimal standard care. Therefore, we will provide NRT to all participants in both groups in the early cessation phase.
Self-help materials (to support smoking cessation)
Our team has translated and validated the World Health Organization's "A guide for tobacco users to quit" into Lao language for use as the self-help material in this study.
Interventions
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Nicotine patch
Provision of nicotine replacement medications in the form of transdermal patches is important to address nicotine withdrawal/craving for smokers who want to quit. Evidence supporting the safety and efficacy of NRT is vast. The PHS Guideline indicates that use of NRT doubles quit rates and should be considered the minimal standard care. Therefore, we will provide NRT to all participants in both groups in the early cessation phase.
Self-help materials (to support smoking cessation)
Our team has translated and validated the World Health Organization's "A guide for tobacco users to quit" into Lao language for use as the self-help material in this study.
Smartphone-based automated treatment for smoking cessation
The automated treatment(AT) include text messages, images, and videos. The AT content is designed to tap the theoretical mechanisms described in the Phase-Based Model (PBM). That is, treatment content is designed to increase motivation, self-efficacy, use of coping skills, and social support, while reducing nicotine withdrawal symptoms and stress. The AT will begin immediately after enrollment and continue for a 12-week period. The AT approach allows for several levels of personalization for each participant, including tailoring to participants' specific health conditions, individual cessation phases, and participants' self-efficacy level or smoking status in the past week.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Self-reported current combustible cigarette smokers (smoked at least 100 cigarettes in lifetime and currently smoke ≥1 cigarette/day)
* Willing to set a quit date within 2 weeks of study enrollment
* Able to provide written informed consent to participate
* Able to read Lao (score ≥4 points on the Rapid Estimate of Adult Literacy in Medicine-Short Form).
Exclusion Criteria
* Ineligibility to participate based on medical or psychiatric conditions diagnosed by a physician/clinician
* Enrollment in another cessation program or current use of other cessation medications
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Setthathirath Hospital
OTHER
Lao National Cancer Center
OTHER
National Center for Laboratory and Epidemiology, Lao PDR
OTHER
National Tobacco Control Committee, Lao PDR
OTHER
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
NIH
University of Oklahoma
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Thanh C Bui
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Stephenson Cancer Center, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center (OUHSC)
Locations
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Lao National Cancer Center
Vientiane, , Laos
Setthathirath Hospital
Vientiane, , Laos
Countries
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References
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Keopaseuth P, Xangsayarath P, Kulkarni S, Phandouangsy K, Soulaphy C, Alounlungsy P, Dittaphong V, Xayavong D, Vongdala C, Siengsounthone L, Businelle M, Frank-Pearce SG, Vidrine DJ, Vidrine JI, Bui TC. Mobile Health Technology for Personalized Tobacco Cessation Support Among Cancer Survivors and Caregivers in Laos (Project SurvLaos): Protocol for a Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial. JMIR Res Protoc. 2025 Jul 30;14:e66517. doi: 10.2196/66517.
Provided Documents
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Document Type: Study Protocol and Statistical Analysis Plan
Other Identifiers
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IRB 14125
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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