ResearchPublications

National assessment of recommendations from healthcare providers for smoking cessation among adults with cancer
Abstract

Cancer survivors benefit from evidence-based smoking cessation treatment. A crucial first step in this process is a clinician recommending that the patient quit smoking. However, contemporary delivery of advice to quit among patients with cancer is not well known. In a cross-sectional analysis of all adult smokers included in a prospective population-representative study of US adults, we analyzed the frequency that patients reported receiving advice to quit smoking from a healthcare professional according to reported cancer history (no cancer, tobacco-related cancer, non-tobacco related cancer history). Among an estimated 28.3 million smokers, 9.3% reported a history of cancer, 48.8% of which were tobacco-related cancers. In general, advice to quit was reported by more (67.8%) cancer survivors than those adults without any cancer (56.0%). After adjustment for sociodemographic factors, smokers with a non tobacco-related cancer (0.51, 95% CI 0.32-0.83) and those without any cancer history (0.43, 95% CI 0.30-0.63) were both less likely to report being advised to quit smoking than patients with a tobacco-related cancer history.

Full citation:
Matulewicz RS, Feuer Z, Birken SA, Makarov DV, Sherman SE, Bjurlin MA, El-Shahawy O (2022).
National assessment of recommendations from healthcare providers for smoking cessation among adults with cancer
Cancer Epidemiology, 78, 102088. doi: 10.1016/j.canep.2021.102088.