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计算机和其他电子戒烟辅助手段的有效性和成本效益:系统评价和网络荟萃分析。

Effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of computer and other electronic aids for smoking cessation: a systematic review and network meta-analysis.

机构信息

School of Health and Population Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK.

出版信息

Health Technol Assess. 2012;16(38):1-205, iii-v. doi: 10.3310/hta16380.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Smoking is harmful to health. On average, lifelong smokers lose 10 years of life, and about half of all lifelong smokers have their lives shortened by smoking. Stopping smoking reverses or prevents many of these harms. However, cessation services in the NHS achieve variable success rates with smokers who want to quit. Approaches to behaviour change can be supplemented with electronic aids, and this may significantly increase quit rates and prevent a proportion of cases that relapse.

OBJECTIVE

The primary research question we sought to answer was: What is the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of internet, pc and other electronic aids to help people stop smoking? We addressed the following three questions: (1) What is the effectiveness of internet sites, computer programs, mobile telephone text messages and other electronic aids for smoking cessation and/or reducing relapse? (2) What is the cost-effectiveness of incorporating internet sites, computer programs, mobile telephone text messages and other electronic aids into current nhs smoking cessation programmes? and (3) What are the current gaps in research into the effectiveness of internet sites, computer programs, mobile telephone text messages and other electronic aids to help people stop smoking?

DATA SOURCES

For the effectiveness review, relevant primary studies were sought from The Cochrane Library [Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL)] 2009, Issue 4, and MEDLINE (Ovid), EMBASE (Ovid), PsycINFO (Ovid), Health Management Information Consortium (HMIC) (Ovid) and Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL) (EBSCOhost) from 1980 to December 2009. In addition, NHS Economic Evaluation Database (NHS EED) and Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects (DARE) were searched for information on cost-effectiveness and modelling for the same period. Reference lists of included studies and of relevant systematic reviews were examined to identify further potentially relevant studies. Research registries of ongoing studies including National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Clinical Research Network Portfolio Database, Current Controlled Trials and ClinicalTrials.gov were also searched, and further information was sought from contacts with experts.

REVIEW METHODS

Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) and quasi-RCTs evaluating smoking cessation programmes that utilise computer, internet, mobile telephone or other electronic aids in adult smokers were included in the effectiveness review. Relevant studies of other design were included in the cost-effectiveness review and supplementary review. Pair-wise meta-analyses using both random- and fixed-effects models were carried out. Bayesian mixed-treatment comparisons (MTCs) were also performed. A de novo decision-analytical model was constructed for estimating the cost-effectiveness of interventions. Expected value of perfect information (EVPI) was calculated. Narrative synthesis of key themes and issues that may influence the acceptability and usability of electronic aids was provided in the supplementary review.

RESULTS

This effectiveness review included 60 RCTs/quasi-RCTs reported in 77 publications. Pooled estimate for prolonged abstinence [relative risk (RR) = 1.32, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.21 to 1.45] and point prevalence abstinence (RR = 1.14, 95% CI 1.07 to 1.22) suggested that computer and other electronic aids increase the likelihood of cessation compared with no intervention or generic self-help materials. There was no significant difference in effect sizes between aid to cessation studies (which provide support to smokers who are ready to quit) and cessation induction studies (which attempt to encourage a cessation attempt in smokers who are not yet ready to quit). Results from MTC also showed small but significant intervention effect (time to relapse, mean hazard ratio 0.87, 95% credible interval 0.83 to 0.92). Cost-threshold analyses indicated some form of electronic intervention is likely to be cost-effective when added to non-electronic behavioural support, but there is substantial uncertainty with regard to what the most effective (thus most cost-effective) type of electronic intervention is, which warrants further research. EVPI calculations suggested the upper limit for the benefit of this research is around £ 2000-3000 per person.

LIMITATIONS

The review focuses on smoking cessation programmes in the adult population, but does not cover smoking cessation in adolescents. Most available evidence relates to interventions with a single tailored component, while evidence for different modes of delivery (e.g. e-mail, text messaging) is limited. Therefore, the findings of lack of sufficient evidence for proving or refuting effectiveness should not be regarded as evidence of ineffectiveness. We have examined only a small number of factors that could potentially influence the effectiveness of the interventions. A comprehensive evaluation of potential effect modifiers at study level in a systematic review of complex interventions remains challenging. Information presented in published papers is often insufficient to allow accurate coding of each intervention or comparator. A limitation of the cost-effectiveness analysis, shared with several previous cost-effectiveness analyses of smoking cessation interventions, is that intervention benefit is restricted to the first quit attempt. Exploring the impact of interventions on subsequent attempts requires more detailed information on patient event histories than is available from current evidence.

CONCLUSIONS

Our effectiveness review concluded that computer and other electronic aids increase the likelihood of cessation compared with no intervention or generic self-help materials, but the effect is small. The effectiveness does not appear to vary with respect to mode of delivery and concurrent non-electronic co-interventions. Our cost-effectiveness review suggests that making some form of electronic support available to smokers actively seeking to quit is highly likely to be cost-effective. This is true whether the electronic intervention is delivered alongside brief advice or more intensive counselling. The key source of uncertainty is that around the comparative effectiveness of different types of electronic interventions. Our review suggests that further research is needed on the relative benefits of different forms of delivery for electronic aids, the content of delivery, and the acceptability of these technologies for smoking cessation with subpopulations of smokers, particularly disadvantaged groups. More evidence is also required on the relationship between involving users in the design of interventions and the impact this has on effectiveness, and finally on how electronic aids developed and tested in research settings are applied in routine practice and in the community.

摘要

背景

吸烟有害健康。平均而言,终生吸烟者会减少 10 年的寿命,大约一半的终生吸烟者因吸烟而缩短了寿命。停止吸烟可以逆转或预防许多这些危害。然而,国民保健制度中的戒烟服务对那些想戒烟的吸烟者成功率不一。行为改变的方法可以辅以电子辅助,这可能会显著提高戒烟率并防止一部分复发的病例。

目的

我们试图回答的主要研究问题是:互联网、个人电脑和其他电子辅助工具在帮助人们戒烟方面的有效性和成本效益如何?我们解决了以下三个问题:(1)网站、计算机程序、手机短信和其他电子辅助戒烟和/或减少复发的效果如何?(2)将网站、计算机程序、手机短信和其他电子辅助纳入当前国民保健制度戒烟计划的成本效益如何?(3)在帮助人们戒烟的网站、计算机程序、手机短信和其他电子辅助工具的有效性方面,目前存在哪些研究空白?

数据来源

为了进行有效性审查,从 2009 年第 4 期 Cochrane 图书馆、MEDLINE(Ovid)、EMBASE(Ovid)、PsycINFO(Ovid)、健康管理信息联盟(Ovid)和 Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature(EBSCOhost)中寻找了关于互联网网站、计算机程序、手机短信和其他电子辅助戒烟的相关原始研究。此外,还搜索了 NHS 经济评估数据库(NHS EED)和效果摘要数据库(DARE),以获取同一时期成本效益和建模方面的信息。还检查了纳入研究的参考文献列表和相关系统评价的参考文献列表,以确定其他可能相关的研究。此外,还搜索了国家卫生研究所(NIHR)临床研究网络投资组合数据库、当前对照试验和 ClinicalTrials.gov 等正在进行的研究注册,还与专家进行了进一步的信息交流。

审查方法

纳入了评估成年吸烟者使用计算机、互联网、移动电话或其他电子辅助戒烟的计算机和其他电子辅助戒烟计划的随机对照试验(RCTs)和准随机对照试验。还纳入了其他设计的、有关成本效益的研究,并在补充审查中纳入了其他主题的研究。使用随机和固定效应模型进行了两两荟萃分析。还进行了贝叶斯混合治疗比较(MTC)。构建了一个新的决策分析模型来估计干预措施的成本效益。计算了预期完美信息价值(EVPI)。在补充审查中提供了有关电子辅助工具的可接受性和可用性可能影响的关键主题和问题的叙述性综述。

结果

这项有效性审查包括 60 项 RCT/准 RCTs,发表在 77 篇出版物中。汇总的长期戒烟率(相对风险[RR] = 1.32,95%置信区间[CI] 1.21-1.45)和点患病率戒烟率(RR = 1.14,95%CI 1.07-1.22)表明,与无干预或通用自助材料相比,计算机和其他电子辅助工具增加了戒烟的可能性。在试图鼓励那些尚未准备好戒烟的吸烟者戒烟的戒烟诱导研究和旨在帮助那些已经准备好戒烟的吸烟者戒烟的戒烟辅助研究之间,没有发现效果大小的显著差异。MTC 结果还显示,干预效果较小但具有统计学意义(复发时间,平均危害比 0.87,95%可信区间 0.83-0.92)。成本阈值分析表明,在非电子行为支持的基础上添加某种形式的电子干预措施很可能具有成本效益,但对于最有效的(因此最具成本效益)的电子干预措施类型仍存在很大的不确定性,这需要进一步的研究。EVPI 计算表明,这项研究的收益上限约为每人 2000-3000 英镑。

局限性

该审查侧重于成年人群体的戒烟计划,但不包括青少年的戒烟。大多数现有证据都与具有单一定制组件的干预措施有关,而关于不同的传递模式(例如电子邮件、短信)的证据有限。因此,缺乏足够证据证明或反驳有效性的发现不应被视为无效的证据。我们只检查了一些可能影响干预效果的因素。在系统评价复杂干预措施时,全面评估潜在的效果修饰因素仍然具有挑战性。发表的论文中提供的信息往往不足以准确编码每个干预措施或比较措施。成本效益分析的一个局限性,与之前的几项戒烟干预措施的成本效益分析共享,是干预的益处仅限于第一次戒烟尝试。要探索干预措施对随后尝试的影响,需要比当前证据中可用的更详细的患者事件史信息。

结论

我们的有效性审查得出结论,与无干预或通用自助材料相比,计算机和其他电子辅助工具增加了戒烟的可能性,但效果较小。这种效果似乎与传递方式和同时进行的非电子联合干预措施无关。我们的成本效益审查表明,向积极寻求戒烟的吸烟者提供某种形式的电子支持极有可能具有成本效益。无论是在简短的咨询基础上提供电子干预,还是提供更密集的咨询,都是如此。主要的不确定性来源是不同类型的电子干预措施的相对有效性。我们的审查表明,需要进一步研究不同形式的传递对电子辅助的相对益处、传递的内容以及这些技术在吸烟人群中的接受程度,特别是弱势群体。还需要更多的证据来证明涉及用户参与干预设计及其对有效性的影响,以及在研究环境中开发和测试的电子辅助工具如何在常规实践和社区中应用。

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