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    Addiction. 2006 Apr;101(4):599-607.

    A smoking cessation intervention for the methadone-maintained.

    Source

    Rhode Island Hospital, Division of General Internal Medicine, Brown University Medical School, Providence, RI 02903, USA. mstein@lifespan.org

    Abstract

    AIM:

    To test, in combination with the nicotine patch, the incremental efficacy of a maximal, tailored behavioral treatment over a minimal treatment for smoking cessation.

    DESIGN:

    Randomized clinical trial with 6-month follow-up.

    SETTING:

    Five methadone maintenance treatment centers in Rhode Island.

    PARTICIPANTS:

    Three hundred and eighty-three methadone-maintained smokers.

    INTERVENTION:

    Participants were assigned randomly to nicotine patch (8-12 weeks) plus either (1) a baseline tailored brief motivational intervention, a quit date behavioral skills counseling session and a relapse prevention follow-up session (Max) or (2) brief advice using the National Cancer Institute's 4 As model (Min). An intent-to-treat analysis with those lost to follow-up assumed to smoke was used.

    MEASUREMENTS:

    Carbon monoxide (CO)-confirmed 7-day point smoking cessation prevalence at 3 and 6 months, and self-reported numbers of cigarettes smoked per day.

    FINDINGS:

    Participants had a mean age of 40 years, were 53% male, 78% Caucasian, smoked 26.7 (+/- 12.2) cigarettes/day and had a mean methadone dose of 95.5 mg. At 3 months, 317 (83%) were re-interviewed; at 6 months, 312 (82%) were re-interviewed. The intent-to-treat, 7-day point prevalence estimate of cessation was 5.2% in the Max group and 4.7% in the Min group (P=0.81) at 6 months. In logistic models with treatment condition, age, gender, race, Fagerström Test for Nicotine Dependence and cigarettes per day as covariates, males were more likely to be abstinent at 3 months (OR 4.67; P=0.003) and 6 months (OR 4.01; P=0.015).

    CONCLUSION:

    A tailored behavioral intervention did not increase quit rates over patch and minimal treatment. Smoking cessation rates in methadone-maintained smokers are low, with men having greater success.

    PMID:
    16548939
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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