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Impact of Behavior Modification Interventions and Lung Cancer Screening on Smoking Cessation in People Living With HIV: A Feasibility Study

RECRUITINGN/ASponsored by AIDS Malignancy Consortium
Actively Recruiting
PhaseN/A
SponsorAIDS Malignancy Consortium
Started2023-03-22
Est. completion2026-05-30
Eligibility
Age45 Years – 80 Years
Healthy vol.Accepted
Locations11 sites

Summary

This clinical trial evaluates the usefulness of using a smartphone-based HIV-specific smoking cessation intervention at the time of lung cancer screening in helping people living with HIV quit smoking. Positively Smoke Free - Mobile may help patients with HIV quit smoking.

Eligibility

Age: 45 Years – 80 YearsHealthy volunteers accepted
Inclusion Criteria:

* Able to understand and willing to sign a written informed consent document
* HIV positive. Documentation of HIV-1 infection by means of any one of the following:

  * Documentation of HIV diagnosis in the medical record by a licensed health care provider;
  * Documentation of receipt of antiretroviral therapy (ART) (at least two different medications that do not constitute a prescription for pre-exposure prophylaxis \[PrEP\] or post-exposure prophylaxis \[PEP\]) by a licensed health care provider. Documentation may be a record of an ART prescription in the participant's medical record, a written prescription in the name of the participant for ART, or pill bottles for ART with a label showing the participant's name;
  * HIV-1 ribonucleic acid (RNA) detection by a licensed HIV-1 RNA assay demonstrating \> 1000 RNA copies/mL;
  * Any licensed HIV screening antibody and/or HIV antibody/antigen combination assay confirmed by a second licensed HIV assay such as a HIV-1 Western blot confirmation or HIV rapid multispot antibody differentiation assay.

Note: The term "licensed" refers to a kit that has been certified or licensed by an oversight body within the participating country and validated internally (e.g., U.S. Food and Drug Administration \[FDA\]).

WHO (World Health Organization) and CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) guidelines mandate that confirmation of the initial test result must use a test that is different from the one used for the initial assessment. A reactive initial rapid test should be confirmed by either another type of rapid assay or an E/CIA that is based on a different antigen preparation and/or different test principle (e.g., indirect versus competitive), or a Western blot or a plasma HIV-1 RNA viral load

* Receiving antiretroviral therapy and CD4 count at least 200 cells/uL within 6 months of registration (due to increased risk of LDCT false positivity with CD4 count \< 200cells/uL)
* Age 45-80 years. This age restriction reflects lung cancer risk and appropriateness for lung cancer screening; in epidemiologic studies lung cancer emerges 5-10 years earlier in PLWH, and therefore this is an appropriate risk group for screening. Although younger persons are likely to benefit more from smoking cessation as a lung cancer prevention measure, the risk/benefit ratio associated with lung cancer screening is unlikely to be optimal at ages \< 45 years for PLWH
* Biochemically confirmed current smoker (exhaled carbon monoxide \[CO\] \>= 7 parts per million)
* Meets United States Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) criteria for LDCT (age 50-80 and \>= 20 pack-years smoking) or high-risk but not meeting USPSTF (age 45-49 and \>= 20 pack-years smoking)
* Possession of a smartphone that can support Positively Smoke Free Mobile (PSF-M) (\> 95% of subjects had eligible phones in prior trials although researchers will include specific study screening questions assessing for adequate smartphone for the intervention)
* Sufficient literacy; \>= 4 on the Rapid Estimate of Adult Literacy in Medicine-Short Form (REALM-R) literacy scale

Exclusion Criteria:

* Receiving any other smoking cessation interventions currently or within the prior 30 days
* Contraindication to nicotine replacement therapy
* Pneumonia or serious lung infection in prior 12 weeks
* Uncontrolled intercurrent illness including, but not limited to, ongoing or active major infection, malignant tumors (unless these tumors were: (a) completely resected basal cell or squamous cell skin carcinomas or (b) in-situ squamous cell carcinoma of the cervix or anus), or any other major uncontrolled comorbid condition that would limit life expectancy or psychiatric illness/social situations that would limit compliance with study requirements
* History of lung cancer
* Pregnant women are excluded from this study because computed tomography introduces radiation exposure and may have teratogenic effects
* Women who are breastfeeding (the safety of nicotine replacement therapy has not been established with breastfeeding)
* Received a chest computed tomography scan in the previous twelve months

Conditions4

CancerHIV InfectionLung CancerTobacco-Related Carcinoma

Locations11 sites

UC San Diego Moores Cancer Center
La Jolla, California, 92093
Jayamalee De Silva, MD858-822-5377jadesilva@health.ucsd.edu
George Washington University
Washington D.C., District of Columbia, 20052
Lakeisha McCormick202-994-0872lmccorm@gwu.edu
Moffitt Cancer Center
Tampa, Florida, 33612
Alisia Sowden813-745-6541Alisia.Sowden@Moffitt.org
Washington University School of Medicine
St Louis, Missouri, 63110
Lee Ratner, MD, PhD314-362-8836lratner@wustl.edu
Weill Cornell Medicine - Cornell Clinical Trials Unit
New York, New York, 10010
Kinge-Ann Marcelin212-746-5613kim@med.cornell.edu

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