Thomsen Thordis, Villebro Nete, Møller Ann Merete
Abdominal Centre, 3133, Rigshospitalet, Blegdamsvej 9, Copenhagen, Denmark, 2100.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2014 Mar 27;2014(3):CD002294. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD002294.pub4.
Smokers have a substantially increased risk of postoperative complications. Preoperative smoking intervention may be effective in decreasing this incidence, and surgery may constitute a unique opportunity for smoking cessation interventions.
The objectives of this review are to assess the effect of preoperative smoking intervention on smoking cessation at the time of surgery and 12 months postoperatively, and on the incidence of postoperative complications.
We searched the Cochrane Tobacco Addiction Group Specialized Register in January 2014.
Randomized controlled trials that recruited people who smoked prior to surgery, offered a smoking cessation intervention, and measured preoperative and long-term abstinence from smoking or the incidence of postoperative complications or both outcomes.
The review authors independently assessed studies to determine eligibility, and discussed the results between them.
Thirteen trials enrolling 2010 participants met the inclusion criteria. One trial did not report cessation as an outcome. Seven reported some measure of postoperative morbidity. Most studies were judged to be at low risk of bias but the overall quality of evidence was moderate due to the small number of studies contributing to each comparison.Ten trials evaluated the effect of behavioural support on cessation at the time of surgery; nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) was offered or recommended to some or all participants in eight of these. Two trials initiated multisession face-to-face counselling at least four weeks before surgery and were classified as intensive interventions, whilst seven used a brief intervention. One further study provided an intensive intervention to both groups, with the intervention group additionally receiving a computer-based scheduled reduced smoking intervention. One placebo-controlled trial examined the effect of varenicline administered one week preoperatively followed by 11 weeks postoperative treatment, and one placebo-controlled trial examined the effect of nicotine lozenges from the night before surgery as an adjunct to brief counselling at the preoperative evaluation. There was evidence of heterogeneity between the effects of trials using intensive and brief interventions, so we pooled these separately. An effect on cessation at the time of surgery was apparent in both subgroups, but the effect was larger for intensive intervention (pooled risk ratio (RR) 10.76; 95% confidence interval (CI) 4.55 to 25.46, two trials, 210 participants) than for brief interventions (RR 1.30; 95% CI 1.16 to 1.46, 7 trials, 1141 participants). A single trial did not show evidence of benefit of a scheduled reduced smoking intervention. Neither nicotine lozenges nor varenicline were shown to increase cessation at the time of surgery but both had wide confidence intervals (RR 1.34; 95% CI 0.86 to 2.10 (1 trial, 46 participants) and RR 1.49; 95% CI 0.98 to 2.26 (1 trial, 286 participants) respectively). Four of these trials evaluated long-term smoking cessation and only the intensive intervention retained a significant effect (RR 2.96; 95% CI 1.57 to 5.55, 2 trials, 209 participants), whilst there was no evidence of a long-term effect following a brief intervention (RR 1.09; 95% CI 0.68 to 1.75, 2 trials, 341 participants). The trial of varenicline did show a significant effect on long-term smoking cessation (RR 1.45; 95% CI 1.01 to 2.07, 1 trial, 286 participants).Seven trials examined the effect of smoking intervention on postoperative complications. As with smoking outcomes, there was evidence of heterogeneity between intensive and brief behavioural interventions. In subgroup analyses there was a significant effect of intensive intervention on any complications (RR 0.42; 95% CI 0.27 to 0.65, 2 trials, 210 participants) and on wound complications (RR 0.31; 95% CI 0.16 to 0.62, 2 trials, 210 participants). For brief interventions, where the impact on smoking had been smaller, there was no evidence of a reduction in complications (RR 0.92; 95% CI 0.72 to 1.19, 4 trials, 493 participants) for any complication (RR 0.99; 95% CI 0.70 to 1.40, 3 trials, 325 participants) for wound complications. The trial of varenicline did not detect an effect on postoperative complications (RR 0.94; 95% CI 0.52 to 1.72, 1 trial, 286 participants).
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: There is evidence that preoperative smoking interventions providing behavioural support and offering NRT increase short-term smoking cessation and may reduce postoperative morbidity. One trial of varenicline begun shortly before surgery has shown a benefit on long-term cessation but did not detect an effect on early abstinence or on postoperative complications. The optimal preoperative intervention intensity remains unknown. Based on indirect comparisons and evidence from two small trials, interventions that begin four to eight weeks before surgery, include weekly counselling and use NRT are more likely to have an impact on complications and on long-term smoking cessation.
吸烟者术后并发症风险大幅增加。术前吸烟干预可能有效降低该发生率,且手术可能为戒烟干预提供独特契机。
本综述旨在评估术前吸烟干预对手术时及术后12个月戒烟的效果,以及对术后并发症发生率的影响。
我们于2014年1月检索了Cochrane烟草成瘾小组专业注册库。
随机对照试验,招募术前吸烟的人群,提供戒烟干预,并测量术前及长期戒烟情况或术后并发症发生率或两者。
综述作者独立评估研究以确定其是否符合入选标准,并相互讨论结果。
13项纳入2010名参与者的试验符合纳入标准。1项试验未将戒烟作为结局报告。7项报告了某种术后发病率测量指标。多数研究被判定为低偏倚风险,但由于每项比较的研究数量较少,证据的总体质量为中等。10项试验评估了行为支持对手术时戒烟的效果;其中8项试验向部分或所有参与者提供或推荐了尼古丁替代疗法(NRT)。2项试验在手术前至少四周开始多疗程面对面咨询,被归类为强化干预,而7项试验采用简短干预。另一项研究对两组均提供强化干预,干预组额外接受基于计算机的定期减少吸烟干预。1项安慰剂对照试验研究了术前一周服用伐尼克兰并术后治疗11周的效果,1项安慰剂对照试验研究了术前评估时在简短咨询基础上从手术前一晚开始使用尼古丁含片的效果。使用强化和简短干预的试验效果之间存在异质性证据,因此我们分别对其进行汇总分析。两个亚组在手术时戒烟方面均有明显效果,但强化干预的效果更大(汇总风险比(RR)10.76;95%置信区间(CI)4.55至25.46,2项试验,210名参与者),而简短干预的效果为(RR 1.30;95%CI 1.16至1.46,7项试验,1141名参与者)。1项试验未显示定期减少吸烟干预有获益证据。尼古丁含片和伐尼克兰在手术时均未显示增加戒烟效果,但两者的置信区间都很宽(RR 1.34;95%CI 0.86至2.10(1项试验,46名参与者)和RR 1.49;95%CI 0.98至2.26(1项试验,286名参与者))。其中4项试验评估长期戒烟情况,只有强化干预仍有显著效果(RR 2.96;95%CI 1.57至5.55,2项试验,209名参与者),而简短干预后无长期效果证据(RR 1.09;95%CI 0.68至1.75,2项试验,341名参与者)。伐尼克兰试验在长期戒烟方面确实显示出显著效果(RR 1.45;95%CI 1.01至2.07,1项试验,286名参与者)。7项试验研究了吸烟干预对术后并发症的影响。与吸烟结局一样,强化和简短行为干预之间存在异质性证据。在亚组分析中,强化干预对任何并发症(RR 0.42;95%CI 0.27至0.65,2项试验,210名参与者)和伤口并发症(RR 0.31;95%CI 0.16至0.62,2项试验,210名参与者)有显著效果。对于简短干预,由于其对吸烟的影响较小,在任何并发症(RR 0.92;95%CI 0.72至1.19,4项试验,493名参与者)和伤口并发症(RR 0.99;95%CI 0.70至1.40,3项试验,325名参与者)方面均无并发症减少的证据。伐尼克兰试验未发现对术后并发症有影响(RR 0.94;95%CI 0.52至1.72,1项试验,286名参与者)。
有证据表明,提供行为支持并给予NRT的术前吸烟干预可增加短期戒烟,并可能降低术后发病率。1项术前不久开始的伐尼克兰试验显示对长期戒烟有益,但未发现对早期戒烟或术后并发症有影响。术前最佳干预强度尚不清楚。基于间接比较和两项小型试验的证据,手术前四至八周开始、包括每周咨询并使用NRT的干预措施更有可能对并发症和长期戒烟产生影响。