Patient-reported receipt of oncology clinician-delivered brief tobacco treatment (5As) six months following cancer diagnosis Journal Article


Authors: Price, S. N.; Neil, J. M.; Flores, M.; Ponzani, C.; Muzikansky, A.; Ballini, L.; Ostroff, J. S.; Park, E. R.
Article Title: Patient-reported receipt of oncology clinician-delivered brief tobacco treatment (5As) six months following cancer diagnosis
Abstract: Introduction: Smoking after a cancer diagnosis represents a modifiable health risk. It is recommended that oncology clinicians address tobacco use among their patients using the 5As brief model: Asking about use, Advising users to quit, Assessing willingness to quit, Assisting in quit attempts (counseling and medication), and Arranging follow-up. However, cross-sectional studies have found limited adoption of 5As (especially Assist and Arrange) in oncology settings. Further investigation is needed to understand changes in, and factors associated with, 5As delivery over time. Methods: Patients recently diagnosed with cancer and reporting current smoking (N = 303) enrolled in a smoking cessation clinical trial and completed three longitudinal surveys; at pre-intervention baseline and 3- and 6-month follow-up post-enrollment. Patient-level correlates of 5As receipt at baseline, 3 months, and 6 months were identified using multilevel regression models. Results: At baseline, patient-reported rates of 5As receipt from oncology clinicians ranged from 85.17% (Ask) to 32.24% (Arrange). Delivery declined from baseline to 6-month follow-up for all 5As, with the largest declines observed for Ask, Advise, Assess, and Assist-Counseling. Diagnosis of a smoking-related cancer was associated with greater odds of 5As receipt at baseline but lower odds at 6-month follow-up. At each time point, female gender, religiosity, advanced disease, cancer-related stigma, and smoking abstinence were associated with lower odds of 5As receipt, while reporting a recent quit attempt prior to enrollment was associated with higher odds of 5As receipt. Conclusion: Oncology clinicians' 5As delivery declined over time. Clinician delivery of the 5As varied based on patients' sociodemographics, clinical and smoking characteristics, and psychosocial factors.
Keywords: counseling; smoking cessation; funding source; cancer patients; cross sectional studies; multiple regression; pretest-posttest design; human; smoking -- drug therapy
Journal Title: Oncology
Volume: 101
Issue: 5
ISSN: 0030-2414
Publisher: S. Karger AG  
Date Published: 2023-06-01
Start Page: 328
End Page: 342
Language: English
DOI: 10.1159/000528963
PROVIDER: EBSCOhost
PROVIDER: cinahl
PUBMED: 36893738
PMCID: PMC10563136
DOI/URL:
Notes: Accession Number: 163721371 -- Entry Date: 20230522 -- Revision Date: 20230529 -- Publication Type: Article; research; tables/charts -- Journal Subset: Biomedical; Continental Europe; Europe -- Special Interest: Oncologic Care -- Grant Information: The National Cancer Institute (1R01CA166147-01A1 and T32CA122061. -- NLM UID: 0135054. -- Source: Cinahl
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  1. Jamie S Ostroff
    344 Ostroff