Treatment Of Tobacco Use In Lung Cancer: Diagnosis And Management Of Lung Cancer

Publication Date: May 1, 2013
Last Updated: March 14, 2022

Recommendations

We recommend that current smokers undergoing LDCT screening be provided with cessation interventions that include counseling and pharmacotherapy. (1, B)
307795

Among current smokers with demonstrated smoking related pulmonary disease we recommend providing intensive cessation interventions. (1, B)
307795

Among lung cancer patients undergoing surgery, we recommend perioperative cessation pharmacotherapy as a method for improving abstinence rates. (1, B)
307795

Among lung cancer patients undergoing surgery for whom pharmacotherapeutic support is either contraindicated or refused, we suggest cessation counseling alone during the perioperative period. (2, C)
307795

Among lung cancer patients undergoing surgery, the timing of cessation does not appear to increase the risk of post-operative complications; we suggest that cessation interventions be initiated in the pre-operative period. (2, C)
307795

For lung cancer patients attempting cessation in conjunction with surgical interventions, we recommend initiating counseling and pharmacotherapy at the outset of surgical intervention. (1, B)
307795

Among lung cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy, we recommend cessation interventions that include counseling and pharmacotherapy to improve abstinence rates. (1, B)
307795

Among lung cancer patients with depressive symptoms, we suggest cessation pharmacotherapy with bupropion as a method to improve abstinence rates, depressive symptoms, and QOL. (2, B)
307795

Among lung cancer patients for whom pharmacotherapeutic support is either contraindicated or refused, we suggest cessation counseling alone as a method to improve abstinence rates. (2, C)
307795

Among lung cancer patients undergoing radiotherapy, we recommend cessation interventions that include counseling and pharmacotherapy. (1, C)
307795

Recommendation Grading

Overview

Title

Treatment Of Tobacco Use In Lung Cancer: Diagnosis And Management Of Lung Cancer

Authoring Organization

Publication Month/Year

May 1, 2013

Last Updated Month/Year

January 9, 2024

Document Type

Guideline

External Publication Status

Published

Country of Publication

US

Document Objectives

Continued tobacco use in the setting of lung cancer management is frequently confounding and always of critical importance. We summarized the published literature concerning the management of tobacco dependence in patients with lung cancer and offer recommendations for integrating dependence treatment into ongoing oncologic care.

Target Patient Population

Patients with lung cancer and continued tobacco use

Inclusion Criteria

Female, Male, Adolescent, Adult, Older adult

Health Care Settings

Ambulatory, Long term care, Outpatient

Intended Users

Nurse, nurse practitioner, physician, physician assistant

Scope

Counseling, Management, Treatment

Diseases/Conditions (MeSH)

D008175 - Lung Neoplasms, D014026 - Tobacco, D000073869 - Tobacco Smoking, D064424 - Tobacco Use

Keywords

lung cancer, smoking, smoking cessation

Supplemental Methodology Resources

Data Supplement