PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Francisco Martin-Lujan AU - Josep Basora-Gallisa AU - Felipe Villalobos AU - Nuria Martin-Vergara AU - Estefania Aparicio-Llopis AU - Irene Pascual-Palacios AU - Antoni Santigosa-Ayala AU - Roxana-Elena Catalin AU - Cristina Rey-Reñones AU - Rosa Solà ED - , TI - Effectiveness of a motivational intervention based on spirometry results to achieve smoking cessation in primary healthcare patients: randomised, parallel, controlled multicentre study AID - 10.1136/jech-2020-216219 DP - 2021 Oct 01 TA - Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health PG - 1001--1009 VI - 75 IP - 10 4099 - http://jech.bmj.com/content/75/10/1001.short 4100 - http://jech.bmj.com/content/75/10/1001.full SO - J Epidemiol Community Health2021 Oct 01; 75 AB - Objective This 12-month study in a primary healthcare network aimed to assess the effectiveness of usual smoking cessation advice compared with personalised information about the spirometry results.Design Randomised, parallel, controlled, multicentre clinical trial.Setting This study involved 12 primary healthcare centres (Tarragona, Spain).Participants Active smokers aged 35–70 years, without known respiratory disease. Each participant received brief smoking cessation advice along with a spirometry assessment. Participants with normal results were randomised to the intervention group (IG), including detailed spirometry information at baseline and 6-month follow-up or control group (CG), which was simply informed that their spirometry values were within normal parameters.Main outcome Prolonged abstinence (12 months) validated by expired-CO testing.Results Spirometry was normal in 571 patients in 571 patients (45.9% male), 286 allocated to IG and 285 to CG. Baseline characteristics were comparable between the groups. Mean age was 49.8 (SD ±7.78) years and mean cumulative smoking exposure was 29.2 (±18.7) pack-years. Prolonged abstinence was 5.6% (16/286) in the IG, compared with 2.1% (6/285) in the CG (p=0.03); the cumulative abstinence curve was favourable in the IG (HR 1.98; 95% CI 1.29 to 3.04).Conclusions In active smokers without known respiratory disease, brief advice plus detailed spirometry information doubled prolonged abstinence rates, compared with brief advice alone, in 12-month follow-up, suggesting a more effective intervention to achieve smoking cessation in primary healthcare.Trial registration number NCT01194596.Data are available on reasonable request. Patient level data, the full dataset and statistical code are available from the corresponding author (fmartin.tgn.ics@gencat.cat).