Investigator

Jennifer I. Vidrine

Professor · University of South Florida, Psychology and Oncologic Sciences

JIVJennifer I. Vidri…
Papers(1)
Smoking Cessation by …
Collaborators(3)
Bethany Shorey FennellCharles E. HooglandDamon J. Vidrine
Institutions(2)
Unknown InstitutionUniversity of Kentucky

Papers

Smoking Cessation by Cancer Treatment Status Among Cervical Cancer Survivors

Continued smoking following a cancer diagnosis is associated with poorer cancer treatment outcomes and survival times. Little is known about how cancer treatment status at the time of tobacco treatment enrollment impacts long-term smoking cessation outcomes. Using data from a smoking cessation RCT, this study compared long-term cessation outcomes of women undergoing active treatment for cervical cancer at trial enrollment (n=40) to outcomes of women with a history of cervical cancer or cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) who were not undergoing active cancer treatment at enrollment (n=154). Participants (n=194) were randomized to Standard Treatment (ST) or ST plus a 6-session Motivation And Problem Solving (MAPS) telephone counseling protocol (data collected: 2017-2021; analyzed: 2023). Sociodemographic differences between participants undergoing (versus not undergoing) active cancer treatment at enrollment were examined. Significant covariates were included in a logistic regression analysis comparing the 2 groups' smoking cessation outcomes at 12 months, the end of the tobacco treatment period. Participants in active cancer treatment at enrollment were significantly younger and less educated than those not in active cancer treatment. Race/ethnicity, relationship status, household income, nicotine dependence, and tobacco treatment condition did not vary by cancer treatment status. After adjusting for tobacco treatment condition, age, and education, being in active cancer treatment at the time of enrollment was associated with lower odds of abstinence at 12 months (5% vs 20%, aOR=0.22, 95% CI [0.05-0.998]). Further research is necessary to identify and overcome barriers to abstinence among cancer survivors undergoing active treatment.

93Works
1Papers
3Collaborators

Positions

2020–

Professor

University of South Florida · Psychology and Oncologic Sciences

2019–

Assistant Center Director for Research Community Partnerships

Moffitt Cancer Center

2019–

Senior Member

Moffitt Cancer Center · Health Outcomes and Behavior

2018–

Professor with Tenure

The University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center · Family and Preventative Medicine

2015–

Director, Oklahoma Tobacco Research Center

The University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center · Stephenson Cancer Center

2015–

Associate Director for Cancer Prevention and Control

The University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center · Stephenson Cancer Center

2015–

Associate Professor (Tenure Eligible)

The University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center · Family and Preventative Medicine

2013–

Deputy Department Chair, Division of Cancer Prevention and Population Science

The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center · Health Disparities Research

2012–

Associate Professor with Tenure

The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center · Behavioral Science | Health Disparities Research

2006–

Assistant Professor (Tenure Track)

The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center · Behavioral Science | Health Disparities Research

2004–

Assistant Professor (Non-Tenure Track)

The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center · Behavioral Science

Education

2003

Doctor of Philosophy

University of South Florida · Clinical Psychology

1997

Master of Science

University of Central Florida · Clinical Psychology

1994

Bachelor of Science

University of Florida · Psychology