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Quitting
smoking
The health benefits of giving up smoking are enormous. It reduces
the risk of lung cancer, other lung diseases, other cancers,
heart disease and stroke. Within 10 to 15 years of giving up,
an ex-smokers' risk of developing lung cancer is only slightly
greater than someone who has never smoked. Quitting before the
onset of serious disease increases healthy life expectancy.
Despite the wealth of information available about the health
benefits of quitting smoking, and the advice and support available
for people trying to quit, it is still a very tough challenge
for most smokers. One in four people in the UK smoke. For this
reason, efforts are constantly being made to try to find more
effective ways of helping people quit smoking. The aim of this
programme is to look at whether using genetic information might
be one way to do this. |
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How could genetics
help smokers quit?
Genetic testing
Cigarette smoking
Could genetic testing help people
quit smoking in the future?
London IDEAS smoking cessation programme
Organisations to help smokers quit |
Genetic
testing
Most existing genetic tests are for diseases caused by a fault
in a single gene, such as hereditary breast cancer. However, these rare forms
of cancer only account
for 5 to 10% of all cancers. There is therefore a lot of research going on
into the genetics of other, common, types of cancer and heart disease, which
are the
two biggest killers in the UK.
Researchers are beginning to find genes that may
make some people more likely to develop cancer and heart disease than others.
An individual's risk of
developing these conditions cannot be measured with genetic tests only. The odds
also depend on, among other things, whether they smoke and what they eat. It
has therefore been claimed that tests for these genes could help people to make
more informed choices about their lifestyle, such as smoking, diet and exercise.

Cigarette
smoking
Cigarette smoking is a major cause of premature death, and 1
in 4 adults in the UK currently smoke. More than 70% of smokers want to quit
smoking, but each time
they seriously attempt it, only 2 to 3% are successful.
Although smokers know
about the general harms of smoking, and they say that health concerns are a
reason when they try to quit, it is thought that they are optimistic
that they personally will not develop health problems. For example, smokers
tend to be sceptical about public health warnings and often doubt that
messages about
risk are relevant to them. Not surprisingly, it has been shown that people
are more likely to act on health advice if it is made personally relevant
to them.
In theory, information about a person's own genes, and how they affect
their chances of developing tobacco-related cancers or heart disease, could be
used to give personalised advice. This could increase the impact of the advice
and help people commit to quitting.

Could
genetic testing help people to quit smoking in the future?
Tests for smoking-disease
genes are useful for research purposes, but it is important to stress that
they are not available for clinical use at present. This means
that you cannot get them from your doctor, clinic or pharmacist. The reason
for this is that research into these genes is still ongoing, and it is
not yet clear
exactly how much of an effect these genes have on your risk of developing a
smoking-related disease.
There is disagreement about exactly when such tests will be successfully
developed for widespread use (will it be 5 years, 10 years, 50 years, or maybe
even more?)
but it is agreed that they will be available at some point in the future. It
is therefore important that we understand what the psychological and behavioural
consequences of such testing might be.
Very little is known about how people
will respond to being given genetic information about their risk of developing
smoking-related diseases such as lung cancer and
heart disease. It may be that telling people that they have a higher than average
genetic risk ("positive" test result) of some smoking-related diseases
increases their motivation to quit, by making them realise they are doing harm
to themselves personally. On the other hand, an individual who learns that they
are at higher genetic risk than other people could simply feel anxious or even
depressed, which could reduce their ability to quit. It could also lead people
who receive a test result that indicates a lower than average risk ("negative" test
result) to wrongly believe that it is ‘safe' for them to carry on
smoking.
This issue is particularly important at the present time because some
companies have already sold similar tests direct to the public, offering lifestyle
advice
on the basis of the results.
In the UK, the Human
Genetics Commission recently held a public consultation and
wrote a report
to the government on how these companies should be regulated. In
the process of the consultation it became clear that very little
is known about the impact that such testing might truly have on
lifestyle. Our study should help us understand this better, and
contribute to the national debate. (NB. For information specifically
about over-the-counter genetic tests, follow
this link).

Organisations
to help smokers quit
Giving up smoking can
be easy for some people, but it remains very hard for most. There
are organisations that aim specifically to help smokers quit:
NHS: giving up smoking
Quit.org.uk
Cancer
Research UK
No Smoking Day
Quitline 0800 002200
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