Testing the mHealth App Intervention for Nondaily Smokers "SiS4"

Purpose

The goal of this project is to test if a new behavioral treatment for people who smoke nondaily and wish to quit works. The new treatment is a smartphone app that engages users in positive psychology exercises and gives them tested tools for quitting smoking. The positive psychology exercises help users maintain their positive emotions while they quit smoking. This app has been developed with and for people who smoke nondaily through several steps of development. The main questions it aims to answer are: - Does the smoking cessation app (SiS4) help people who smoke nondaily quit smoking? - How do people's attitudes towards smoking, their smoking urges, and their mental well-being shift when using the SiS4 app? Researchers will compare the new app to an existing app that was developed for people who smoke daily to see if the new app works better to help people who smoke nondaily quit smoking. Participants will: 1. Use a smartphone app every day for 7 weeks 2. Complete online surveys about their smoking, attitudes about smoking, withdrawal symptoms and smoking urges, app use, and mental well-being at enrollment as well as 2 weeks, 6 weeks, 3 months, 6 months and 12 months after the initially chosen quit date. If the SiS4 app works well, it would be the first evidence-based quit-smoking treatment for people who smoke nondaily.

Condition

  • Smoking Cessation

Eligibility

Eligible Ages
Over 18 Years
Eligible Genders
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No

Criteria

- 18 years of age or older

- Sufficiently fluent in English to read and comprehend intervention and assessment
materials

- Owns a smartphone (Android or iOS only)

- Currently smokes less than daily but at least weekly

- Has smoked 100+ cigarettes lifetime

- Has current intention to quit smoking

- Currently resides in the US

- Can use online survey technology to complete surveys

- Can download, install and use a smartphone app

Study Design

Phase
N/A
Study Type
Interventional
Allocation
Randomized
Intervention Model
Parallel Assignment
Intervention Model Description
single-blind, remote, randomized clinical trial
Primary Purpose
Treatment
Masking
Single (Participant)

Arm Groups

ArmDescriptionAssigned Intervention
Experimental
Smiling instead of Smoking
Participants will be onboarded to the smartphone app "Smiling instead of Smoking" (SiS4) and will be asked to use it for 7 weeks while they quit smoking.
  • Behavioral: Smiling instead of Smoking
    Participants randomized to the treatment condition will use the "Smiling instead of Smoking" (SiS) smartphone app. This app delivers and guides participants through two types of content to help them during their quit attempt: (1) positive psychology content (i.e., happiness habit-building exercises, happiness boost activity, and science-based information on the relevance of positive psychology activities) designed to help nondaily smokers maintain positive affect while they go through the process of smoking cessation; and (2) traditional behavioral smoking cessation content to guide their quit process based on US Clinical Practice Guidelines.
    Other names:
    • SiS4
Active Comparator
QuitGuide
Participants will be onboarded to the smartphone app "QuitGuide" (QG) which will be 're-branded', so that the name "Smiling instead of Smoking" will appear in the banner of the app instead of "QuitGuide", and will be asked to use it for 7 weeks while they quit smoking.
  • Behavioral: QuitGuide
    Participants randomized to the control condition will use the National Cancer Institute (NCI)'s "QuitGuide" (QG) smartphone app. The QuitGuide app follows the US Clinical Practice Guidelines. The app is freely available on NCI's Smokefree.gov website, which is a recommended resource for treating smokers in the healthcare setting. The QuitGuide app is frequently used as a comparison app in smartphone app smoking cessation studies. It asks participants to set a quit day, track their mood and cravings, and log their cigarettes. It provides app users with guidance on quitting (i.e., "Learn to Quit" information), offers strategies to counter smoking triggers, and allows users to set reminders to stay smoke free (time and location based).
    Other names:
    • QG

Recruiting Locations

Massachusetts General Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts 02114
Contact:
Bettina B Hoeppner
6176431988
BHOEPPNER@mgh.harvard.edu

More Details

Status
Recruiting
Sponsor
Massachusetts General Hospital

Study Contact

Bettina Hoeppner, Ph.D., M.S.
617-643-1988
bhoeppner@mgh.harvard.edu

Detailed Description

The present study is a large-scale (n=1,600) single-blind, remote, parallel, randomized clinical trial (RCT) comparing our app, the SiS app, to the NCI's smartphone app "QuitGuide". The RCT will be conducted entirely remotely, because the app is intended to be accessible to smokers nationally without need for in person contact. All participants will set a targeted smoking cessation quit date and will be instructed to use the provided app for 7 weeks, 1 week prior to and 6 weeks post-quit. Online surveys will be conducted at enrollment and follow-up occurring 2 weeks, 6 weeks, 3 months, 6 months and 12 months after the initially chosen quit date. The primary outcome measure will be 30-day point-prevalence abstinence (PPA) at 6 months post-quit. The investigator team developed the app, "Smiling instead of Smoking (SiS)," specifically for and in collaboration with people who smoke less than daily. This app uses a positive psychology approach, in line with their preference to focus on positive self-identity and wellness. The investigators have rigorously and iteratively developed and tested this app in a series of small scale prior studies. Study 1 (2017P001106) demonstrated feasibility and acceptability when smokers were onboarded in person. Study 2 (2018P002699) demonstrated feasibility and acceptability when smokers were onboarded remotely, nationwide. Study 3 (NCT04672239) demonstrated the app's ability to engage nondaily smokers and showed proof-of-concept efficacy in a small, randomized trial, where participants using the SiS app had significantly higher self-efficacy, lower craving, and higher positive affect at the end of treatment, compared to controls. In this large-scale efficacy trial, the primary outcome measure will be 30-day point-prevalence abstinence (PPA) at 6-month post quit. The aims of the study are: Aim 1: Test the effectiveness of the SiS app to improve smoking cessation outcomes 1. H1: 30-day PPA six months post quit will be higher for SiS compared to QuitGuide participants. 2. H2: SiS participants will have higher 30-day PPA at end of treatment and 12 months post quit. Aim 2: Examine mechanisms and moderators of change 1. Using mediation modeling, the investigators will test if theorized mechanisms of change (i.e., self-efficacy, positive affect, or craving) account for observed effects on 30-day PPA six months post quit. 2. (Exploratory aim:) Using moderated mediation models, the investigators will examine if socioeconomic status, race, and/or the presence of mental health conditions moderate the effectiveness of SiS or moderate the mediation effects outlined in aim 2a. Exploratory Aim 3: Explore app usage patterns and their relationship to smoking cessation 1. The investigators will identify patterns of overall app use, as identified by group-based trajectory modeling. 2. The investigators will conduct a feature-level analysis of the apps (i.e., which features got used how often). 3. The investigators will test if patterns of app use and/or feature use predict 30-day PPA six months post-quit. If found to be efficacious, this study would provide the first evidence of an efficacious treatment (the SiS app) for people who smoke less than daily, for whom currently no treatment guidelines exist.