Cancer Research News
Successful Lung Cancer Surgery Not Enough to Break Nicotine Dependence in Many Smokers
PHILADELPHIA (December 11, 2006) − A new study has found that close
to half of 154 smokers who had surgery to remove early stage lung cancer
picked up a cigarette again within 12 months of their potentially
curative operation, and more than one-third were smoking at the one year
mark. Sixty percent of patients who started smoking again did so within
two months of surgery.
The study, led by researchers at Washington University School of
Medicine and published in the December issue of Cancer Epidemiology
Biomarkers & Prevention, is the first to look at smoking relapse among
people who were “forced” to quit due to impending surgery.
“These patients are all addicted, so you cannot assume they will easily
change their behavior simply because they have dodged this particular
bullet,” said the study’s lead author, Mark S. Walker, Ph.D., a clinical
psychologist and Assistant Professor of Medicine at Washington
University. “Their choices are driven by insidious cravings for
nicotine.”
The investigators found that those smokers who were the last to give up
their cigarettes − some on the same day as their operation − and who saw
smoking as a pleasurable activity they would have difficulty giving up,
were also the first to resume the habit. And they concluded that
patients who were able to hold out the longest before they took up a
cigarette after surgery were the ones who were most likely not to be
smoking in a year’s time.
“The results suggest that patients who wait until cancer surgery to quit
smoking need assistance from the medical community to help them stay
away from cigarettes, and that this intervention should begin as soon as
possible after treatment,” Walker said. No such programs are currently
offered to lung cancer surgery patients, he added.
At least seven studies of non-small cell lung cancer patients have shown
that many of these patients continue smoking despite the risk, but the
rate of relapse ranged from a low of 13 percent to about 60 percent.
This study was unique in that it sought to include patients believed to
be highly dependent on nicotine − so it included only patients who
smoked within three months of their diagnosis − and it attempted to use
saliva samples as well as questionnaires to gauge whether patients were
smoking 3, 6, and 12 months after surgery.
Investigators at Washington University and at the University of Texas
M.D. Anderson Cancer Center enrolled 154 patients being treated for
early stage lung cancer at their centers. These patients were lucky,
Walker said. “Their cancer was discovered largely by accident when they
were being examined for other medical conditions, and so was potentially
curable by surgery,” he said. “More than two-thirds of lung cancer is
diagnosed at later stages in people with symptoms, and treatment is much
less successful.”
The researchers found that 43 percent of patients smoked at some point
after surgery and 37 percent were smoking 12 months after their
operation.
Consistent with previous research, the investigators hypothesized that
greater nicotine dependence, a younger age, lower income, and a lower
level of education would be associated with a greater likelihood of
smoking post surgery.
But that is not what they saw on two of the four variables. Instead,
researchers found no link between the quantity of smoking and the
ability to quit, and they also were surprised to discover that higher
education was associated with a greater likelihood of smoking after
surgery. “It wasn’t the number of cigarettes smoked daily that
determined who couldn’t quit, but how long they continued to smoke
before surgery. About half of the patients studied smoked within two
weeks of their operation,” Walker says. “We are not certain what to make
of the finding about education, because no other study about smoking
cessation has reached that conclusion.”
How long patients quit before surgery may have been influenced by their
“self efficacy” for quitting, he says. “The thing that really drove
whether or not people relapsed is whether they saw smoking as
pleasurable and rewarding to the point that they can’t do without
cigarettes, and they don’t believe they are able to quit.”
Patients who were able to quit by the one year mark waited longer to
attempt to smoke again, or never began again. In fact, more than one in
four patients who smoked after surgery were nonsmokers at the 12-month
follow-up, he said. “Perhaps for these patients, lung cancer surgery was
a wake-up call to quit, but many others need intervention to help them
fight nicotine.”
The study was funded by grants from
the National Institutes of Health.
Source: American Association for Cancer Research
See Also:
Smokers Who
Cut Back on Cigarettes May Negate Benefit through Compensatory Smoking
(Dec 2006)
Exercise Can Reduce a Smoker's Lung Cancer Risk, but Quitting Smoking Is
Still Most Important (Dec 2006)