Tobacco Assessment in Actively Accruing National Cancer Institute Cooperative Group Program Clinical Trials

Author:

Peters Erica N.1,Torres Essie1,Toll Benjamin A.1,Cummings K. Michael1,Gritz Ellen R.1,Hyland Andrew1,Herbst Roy S.1,Marshall James R.1,Warren Graham W.1

Affiliation:

1. Erica N. Peters and Roy S. Herbst, Yale University School of Medicine; Benjamin A. Toll and Roy S. Herbst, Smilow Cancer Hospital at Yale-New Haven and Yale Cancer Center, New Haven, CT; Essie Torres, Andrew Hyland, James R. Marshall, and Graham W. Warren, Roswell Park Cancer Institute, Buffalo, NY; K. Michael Cummings, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC; and Ellen R. Gritz, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX.

Abstract

Purpose Substantial evidence suggests that tobacco use has adverse effects on cancer treatment outcomes; however, routine assessment of tobacco use has not been fully incorporated into standard clinical oncology practice. The purpose of this study was to evaluate tobacco use assessment in patients enrolled onto actively accruing cancer clinical trials. Methods Protocols and forms for 155 actively accruing trials in the National Cancer Institute's (NCI's) Clinical Trials Cooperative Group Program were evaluated for tobacco use assessment at enrollment and follow-up by using a structured coding instrument. Results Of the 155 clinical trials reviewed, 45 (29%) assessed any form of tobacco use at enrollment, but only 34 (21.9%) assessed current cigarette use. Only seven trials (4.5%) assessed any form of tobacco use during follow-up. Secondhand smoke exposure was captured in 2.6% of trials at enrollment and 0.6% during follow-up. None of the trials assessed nicotine dependence or interest in quitting at any point during enrollment or treatment. Tobacco status assessment was higher in lung/head and neck trials as well as phase III trials, but there was no difference according to year of starting accrual or cooperative group. Conclusion Most actively accruing cooperative group clinical trials do not assess tobacco use, and there is no observable trend in improvement over the past 8 years. Failure to incorporate standardized tobacco assessments into NCI-funded Cooperative Group Clinical Trials will limit the ability to provide evidence-based cessation support and will limit the ability to accurately understand the precise effect of tobacco use on cancer treatment outcomes.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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