A Population-Level Assessment of Smoking Cessation following a Diagnosis of Tobacco- or Nontobacco-Related Cancer among United States Adults

Author:

Matulewicz Richard S.123ORCID,Bjurlin Marc A.4,Feuer Zachary23,Makarov Danil V.123,Sherman Scott E.13,Scheidell Joy1,Khan Maria R.1,El-Shahawy Omar15

Affiliation:

1. New York University School of Medicine, Department of Population Health, USA

2. New York University School of Medicine, Department of Urology, USA

3. VA New York Harbor Healthcare System, USA

4. University of North Carolina, Department of Urology, Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, USA

5. New York University School of Global Public Health, Division of Global Health, USA

Abstract

Introduction. Smoking cessation after a cancer diagnosis can significantly improve treatment outcomes and reduce the risk of cancer recurrence and all-cause mortality. Aim. We sought to measure the association between cancer diagnosis and subsequent smoking cessation. Methods. Data was sourced from the Population Assessment of Health and Tobacco (PATH) study, a representative population-based sample of United States adults. Our analytic sample included all adult smokers at Wave I, our baseline. The exposure of interest was either a tobacco-related cancer diagnosis, nontobacco-related cancer diagnosis, or no cancer diagnosis (the referent) reported at Wave II or III. The primary outcome was smoking cessation after diagnosis, at Wave IV. Results/Findings. Our sample was composed of 7,286 adult smokers at the baseline representing an estimated 40.9 million persons. Smoking cessation rates after a diagnosis differed after a tobacco-related cancer (25.9%), a nontobacco-related cancer (8.9%), and no cancer diagnosis (17.9%). After adjustment, diagnosis with a tobacco-related cancer was associated with a higher odds of smoking cessation (OR 1.83, 95% CI 1.00-3.33) compared to no cancer diagnosis. Diagnosis with a nontobacco-related cancer was not significantly linked to smoking cessation (OR 0.52, 95% CI 0.48-1.45). Conclusion. Diagnosis with a tobacco-related cancer is associated with greater odds of subsequent smoking cessation compared to no cancer diagnosis, suggesting that significant behavioral change may occur in this setting.

Funder

New York State Department of Health

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health

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