Awareness of the Harms of Continued Smoking Among Cancer Survivors Journal Articles uri icon

  •  
  • Overview
  •  
  • Research
  •  
  • Identity
  •  
  • Additional Document Info
  •  
  • View All
  •  

abstract

  • BACKGROUND: Smoking cessation is an integral part of cancer survivorship. To help improve survivorship education, clinicians need an understanding of patient awareness of the harms of continued smoking. METHODS: Cancer survivors from Princess Margaret Cancer Centre (Toronto, ON) were surveyed on their awareness of the harms of continued smoking on cancer-related outcomes. Multivariable logistic regression models assessed factors associated with awareness and whether awareness was associated with subsequent cessation among smokers at diagnosis. RESULTS: Among 1118 patients, 23% were current smokers pre-diagnosis and 54% subsequently quit; 25% had lung and 30% head and neck cancers. Many patients reported being unaware that continued smoking results in greater cancer surgical complications (53%), increased radiation side effects (62%), decreased quality of life during chemotherapy (51%), decreased chemotherapy or radiation efficacy (57%), increased risk of death (40%), and increased development of second primaries (38%). Being a current smoker was associated with greater lack of awareness of some of these smoking harms (aORs = 1.53-2.20, P < 0.001-0.02), as was exposure to any second-hand smoke (aORs = 1.45-1.53, P = 0.006-0.04) and being diagnosed with early stage cancer (aORs = 1.38-2.31, P < 0.001-0.06). Among current smokers, those with fewer pack-years, being treated for cure, or had a non-tobacco-related cancer were more likely unaware. Awareness that continued tobacco use worsen quality of life after chemotherapy was associated with subsequent cessation (aOR = 2.26, P = 0.006). CONCLUSIONS: Many cancer survivors are unaware that continued smoking can negatively impact cancer-related outcomes. The impact of educating patients about the potential harms of continued smoking when discussing treatment plans should be further evaluated.

authors

  • Eng, Lawson
  • Alton, Devon
  • Song, Yuyao
  • Su, Jie
  • Zhang, Qihuang
  • Che, Jiahua
  • Farzanfar, Delaram
  • Mohan, Rahul
  • Krys, Olivia
  • Mattina, Katie
  • Harper, Christopher
  • Liu, Sophia
  • Yoannidis, Tom
  • Milne, Robin
  • Abdelmutti, Nazek
  • Brown, M Catherine
  • Vennettilli, Ashlee
  • Hope, Andrew J
  • Howell, Doris
  • Jones, Jennifer M
  • Selby, Peter
  • Evans, William
  • Xu, Wei
  • Goldstein, David Paul
  • Giuliani, Meredith Elana
  • Liu, Geoffrey

publication date

  • July 2020