Mediation Effects of Biobehavioral Factors in a Trial of Pharmacotherapy and Intensive Cessation Counseling for People with HIV Who Smoke Cigarettes in Nairobi, Kenya
Angela A. Omanya, Jonathan Shuter, Emily Koech, Sylvia Ojoo, Wendy Potts, Lan Li, Christopher W. Kahler, Seth S. Himelhoch

TL;DR
This study explores how biobehavioral factors influence smoking cessation in people with HIV in Nairobi, finding that self-efficacy plays a key role in the success of counseling.
Contribution
The study identifies self-efficacy as a mediator of successful smoking cessation through counseling, but not through bupropion.
Findings
PSF counseling significantly increased abstinence self-efficacy and reduced loneliness compared to brief advice.
Mediation analysis showed that self-efficacy at 12 weeks mediated the effect of PSF counseling on abstinence at 36 weeks.
Bupropion did not show significant mediation effects through the tested biobehavioral factors.
Abstract
There is growing recognition of the important health risks of tobacco use in people with HIV (PWH). Multiple randomized controlled trials have tested cessation treatments in this population, but little is known about factors that mediate successful quitting. We conducted a randomized, placebo-controlled 2 × 2 factorial design trial of a behavioral intervention (Positively Smoke Free [PSF] one-on-one counseling) vs. brief advice to quit ± bupropion vs. placebo in PWH who smoked cigarettes in Nairobi, Kenya. Abstinence from cigarettes was assessed by self-report and exhaled carbon monoxide (ECO). We conducted pre-planned analyses of putative mediators of the effects of bupropion (i.e. craving, withdrawal, negative affect) and of PSF counseling (i.e. abstinence self-efficacy, decisional balance, and loneliness) at 12-weeks on biochemically-confirmed abstinence at 36-weeks. 269 participants…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSmoking Behavior and Cessation · Substance Abuse Treatment and Outcomes · HIV/AIDS Research and Interventions
