Why provide smoking cessation to cancer patients?

The following provides the reasons and evidence for the importance of smoking cessation care with oncology patients.


THE REASON FOR CANCER SERVICES

All people with cancer who smoke should have access to best practice smoking cessation care at all stages of the cancer care continuum.

Oncology health services should aim to embed a smoking cessation brief 3As model of care (COSA, 2020).

THE REASON FOR ONCOLOGISTS, SURGEONS AND PHYSICIANS

Specialists are known to ask patients about their smoking status, yet they often do not follow through with providing advice about the benefits of quitting and referral to Quitline, Nicotine Replacement Therapy, GPs or Tobacco Specialists.

The website is created to provide you with the tools to provide brief smoking cessation using the 3As model of care.

 

 

Harms & Benefits

Smoking cessation contributes to improved prognosis, reduced treatment toxicities and improved quality of life for people with cancer.

The risks of continued tobacco use after a cancer diagnosis

The cancer can become more aggressive [1] e.g., neurological

Increases the risk of the cancer spreading (metastasis) [2] e.g., melanoma

Increases the risk of second primary cancer [3] e.g., head & neck, breast, melanoma

Increase in cancer recurrence [4] e.g., lung

Increase in cancer-related mortality [5] e.g., breast

Increased risk of all-cause mortality [6] e.g., lung, colorectal

The benefits of quitting after a cancer diagnosis

Reduces cancer treatment-related complications [7] e.g. lung

Improves physical symptoms [8] e.g., oesophageal

Improves chances of survival [9] e.g., lung

Improves anti-cancer drug effectiveness [10] e.g. cervical

Improves treatment outcomes [11] e.g. head & neck

Improves post-surgery healing [12] [13] e.g., melanoma, upper GI

“...I would have taken it more seriously if my oncologist had told me to quit...”

- Suzan (35 year old)

 

The model

PowerPoint Presentations

  • Smoking Cessation in Cancer Services - Training (CINSW)

    Why deliver smoking cessation interventions to people with cancer?

  • Smoking Cessation in Cancer Services - Training (CINSW)

    Delivering the 3As Brief Intervention

  • Smoking Cessation in Cancer Services - Training (CINSW)

    How to ask patients about cessation using AAA model

  • Smoking Cessation in Cancer Services - Training (CINSW)

    Step 2: Advise

  • Smoking Cessation in Cancer Services - Training (CINSW)

    Step 3: Act, NRT, and routine referral to Quitline

 Videos

  • Surgeons General's Report Conclusions

    Radiation Oncologist, Prof Graham Warren presents report findings:

    Causal relationship between cigarette smoking and increase risk of secondary primary cancers

    Quitting reduces overall mortality rates

    Tobacco use has a negative association with at least one outcome (e.g. survival, toxicity) across tumour streams (lung, head/neck, breast, gyne, hematologic, genitourinary non-prostate, prostate cancers)

  • Cessation impacts lung, breast, and prostate patients (1:21min; CINSW resource)

    Presented by Prof Graham Warren:

    Cause of death by cancer has higher hazard ratios for current smokers (prostate example)

    Cessation benefits overall mortality for lung and breast cancer patients

  • Treatment Failure and Cost (1:34min; CINSW resource)

    Presented by oncologist Prof Graham Warren:

    1st line cancer treatment failure is high for current smokers (e.g., 795 patients in NSW annually)

    Financial costs are high for 1stline failure

  • Number Needed to Treat (1:59min; CINSW resource)

    Presented by oncologist Prof Graham Warren:

    The Number Needed to Treat (NNT) is the number of patients you need to treat to prevent one additional bad outcome (e.g., death)

    The number needed to treat for smoking is estimated 3-5 (means you need to treat 5 people who smoke to prevent one additional bad outcome)

USA Prof Graham Warren interview: Tobacco in Cancer Treatment Outcomes (1:22min; CINSW resource)

Interview with oncologist Prof Graham Warren:

  • Smoking in cancer patients increases mortality

  • Decreases chance of 1st line treatment success

  • Smoking decreases effectiveness of radiation and all chemotherapy for all cancers (Head & neck, lung, breast, prostate, colon)

Australian Oncologist personal opinion about smoking cessation (2:03min; C2Q resource)

Oncologist Dr Fiona Day describes her experience of patient reactions to starting a conversation around smoking cessation

 

Rapid Learning: eVIQ overview of smoking cessation in oncology settings (1:50 min)

Quick infographic video overview of why, how and what smoking cessation services are available

View Here: https://education.eviq.org.au/rapid-learning/archive/smoking-cessation

Factsheets

  • The clinical case for smoking cessation in cancer care (CINSW)

    Benefits of smoking cessation in cancer

    Negative treatment outcomes if smoking

    AAA module and further advise

  • Smoking Cessation in Oncology (eviQ)

    Pharmacotherapy

    Benefits to patients when quitting

    Risks to patients if they keep smoking

    5A Model

  • WHO Tobacco and Cancer Treatment Outcomes knowledge survey

    Evidence on tobacco use

    Impact on treatment outcomes

References:

1.  Ahn, S., et al., Cigarette smoking is associated with increased risk of malignant gliomas: A nationwide population-based cohort study. Cancers, 2020. 12(5): p. 1343.

2.  Melanoma Institute Australia. Smoking linked to increased risk of melanoma spreading. 2017  22/07/21]; Available from: https://www.melanoma.org.au/research/research-news/smoking-linked-to-increased-risk-of-melanoma-spreading/.

3.  Do, K.-A., et al., Second primary tumors in patients with upper aerodigestive tract cancers: joint effects of smoking and alcohol (United States). Cancer Causes & Control, 2003. 14(2): p. 131-138.

4.  Florou, A.N., et al., Clinical Significance of Smoking Cessation in Subjects With Cancer: A 30-Year Review. Respiratory Care, 2014. 59(12): p. 1924-1936.

5.  Passarelli, M.N., et al., Cigarette smoking before and after breast cancer diagnosis: mortality from breast cancer and smoking-related diseases. Journal of Clinical Oncology, 2016. 34(12): p. 1315.

6. Sharma, A., et al., Tobacco Smoking and Postoperative Outcomes After Colorectal Surgery. Annals of Surgery, 2013. 258(2): p. 296-300.

7.  Lugg, S.T., et al., Smoking and timing of cessation on postoperative pulmonary complications after curative-intent lung cancer surgery. J Cardiothorac Surg, 2017. 12(1): p. 52.

8.  Cook, M.B., et al., Cigarette smoking increases risk of Barrett's esophagus: an analysis of the Barrett's and Esophageal Adenocarcinoma Consortium. Gastroenterology, 2012. 142(4): p. 744-753.

9.  Sheikh, M., et al., Postdiagnosis Smoking Cessation and Reduced Risk for Lung Cancer Progression and Mortality. Annals of Internal Medicine, 2021.

10.  Eifel, P.J., et al., Correlation of smoking history and other patient characteristics with major complications of pelvic radiation therapy for cervical cancer. J Clin Oncol, 2002. 20(17): p. 3651-7.

11.  Kountourakis, P., et al., Combined modality therapy of cT2N0M0 esophageal cancer. Cancer, 2011. 117(5): p. 925-930.

12.  Venosa, A. History of Smoking Affects How the Body Fights Melanoma. 2019  22/07/21]; Available from: https://www.skincancer.org/blog/history-of-smoking-affects-how-the-body-fights-melanoma/.

13.  Jung, K.H., et al., Preoperative smoking cessation can reduce postoperative complications in gastric cancer surgery. Gastric Cancer, 2015. 18(4): p. 683-90.