Effect of early medication adherence on behavioral treatment utilization and smoking cessation among individuals with current or past major depressive disorder

Little is known about the mechanisms by which medication adherence promotes smoking cessation among adults with MDD. We tested the hypothesis that early adherence promotes abstinence by increasing behavioral treatment (BT) utilization. Data for this post-hoc analysis were from a randomized trial of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Addictive behaviors 2024-04, Vol.151, p.107952, Article 107952
Hauptverfasser: Hitsman, Brian, Papandonatos, George D, Fox, Erica N, Bauer, Anna-Marika, Gollan, Jacqueline K, Huffman, Mark D, Mohr, David C, Leone, Frank T, Khan, Sadiya S, Achenbach, Chad J, Paul Wileyto, E, Schnoll, Robert A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Little is known about the mechanisms by which medication adherence promotes smoking cessation among adults with MDD. We tested the hypothesis that early adherence promotes abstinence by increasing behavioral treatment (BT) utilization. Data for this post-hoc analysis were from a randomized trial of 149 adults with current or past MDD treated with BT and either varenicline (n = 81) or placebo (n = 68). Arms were matched on medication regimen. Early medication adherence was measured by the number of days in which medication was taken at the prescribed dose during the first six of 12 weeks of pharmacological treatment (weeks 2-7). BT consisted of eight 45-minute sessions (weeks 1-12). Bioverified abstinence was assessed at end-of-treatment (week 14). A regression-based approach was used to test whether the effect of early medication adherence on abstinence was mediated by BT utilization. Among 141 participants who initiated the medication regimen, BT utilization mediated the effect of early medication adherence on abstinencea) an interquartile increase in early medication days from 20 to 42 predicted a 4.2 times increase in abstinence (Total Risk Ratio (RR) = 4.24, 95% CI = 2.32-13.37; p 
ISSN:0306-4603
1873-6327
1873-6327
DOI:10.1016/j.addbeh.2024.107952