4.6 Review

Protocol for a systematic review of economic evaluations of preoperative smoking cessation interventions for preventing surgical complications

Journal

BMJ OPEN
Volume 11, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-057171

Keywords

health economics; surgery; health policy; public health

Funding

  1. Victorian Government Mid-Career Research Fellowship through the Victorian Cancer Agency [MCRF20049]
  2. Victorian Government Early-Career Research Fellowship through the Victorian Cancer Agency [ECRF 20005]
  3. Cancer Council Victoria

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This systematic review aims to summarize the cost-effectiveness of preoperative smoking cessation interventions for preventing surgical complications compared with usual care. The findings will provide critical evidence for healthcare professionals and policymakers to develop and disseminate best practice guidelines in implementing tobacco control initiatives.
Introduction The short-term economic benefit of embedding best practice tobacco dependence treatment (TDT) into healthcare services prior to surgery across different populations and jurisdictions is largely unknown. The aim of this systematic review is to summarise the cost-effectiveness of preoperative smoking cessation interventions for preventing surgical complications compared with usual care. The results will provide hospital managers, clinicians, healthcare professionals and policymakers with a critical summary of the economic evidence on providing TDT routinely before surgery, aiding the development and dissemination of unified, best practice guidelines, that is, implementation of article 14 of the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control. Methods and analysis A comprehensive search of peer-reviewed literature will be conducted from database inception until 23 June 2021 (Cochrane, Econlit, Embase, Health Technology Assessment, Medline Complete, Scopus). Published, English-language articles describing economic evaluations of preoperative smoking cessation interventions for preventing surgical complications will be included. One researcher will complete the searches and two researchers will independently screen results for eligible studies. Any disagreement will be resolved by the third researcher. A narrative summary of included studies will be provided. Study characteristics, economic evaluation methods and cost-effectiveness results will be extracted by one reviewer and descriptive analyses will be undertaken. A second reviewer will review data extracted for accuracy from 10% of the included studies. Reporting and methodological quality of the included studies will be evaluated independently by two reviewers using the Consolidated Health Economic Evaluation Reporting Standards statement and the Quality of Health Economic Studies Instrument checklist, respectively. Ethics and dissemination This research does not require ethics approval because the study is a planned systematic review of published literature. Findings will be presented at health economic, public health and tobacco control conferences, published in a peer-reviewed journal and disseminated via social media.

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