Halsey N A, Coberly J S, Holt E, Coreil J, Kissinger P, Moulton L H, Brutus J R, Boulos R
Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health, Baltimore, Md.
JAMA. 1992 Apr 15;267(15):2062-6.
To determine whether a previously observed association between human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection and smoking in Haitian women could be explained by confounding high-risk behaviors.
A nested case-control study at a primary care health clinic in Cité Soleil, Haiti.
Women who reported having smoked (n = 89) and randomly selected nonsmokers (n = 329) who had participated in a survey 1 to 12 months earlier evaluating risk factors for HIV-1 infection.
Lifetime sexual practices, smoking, health beliefs and practices, and other factors potentially confounding the relationship between smoking and HIV-1 infection.
Compared with nonsmokers, smokers reported higher rates of high-risk behaviors, including more lifetime sex partners (P less than .001), being less likely to be married (P less than .01), and being more likely to have visited folk healers (P less than .01). No intravenous drug use was reported, and no significant differences were noted between smokers and nonsmokers in numbers of past surgical or dental procedures or injections. Adjustment for all factors associated with HIV-1 infection and smoking in regression analyses revealed an independent association between smoking and HIV-1 infection (odds ratio [OR], 3.4; 95% confidence interval [Cl], 1.6 to 7.5). Other factors associated with HIV-1 infection included having more than two life-time sex partners (OR, 3.4; 95% Cl, 1.7 to 6.8) and lower socioeconomic status as reflected by a dirt floor in the home (OR, 8.6; 95% Cl, 3.3 to 22.0).
Smoking is a marker for high-risk sexual behavior and is associated with an increased risk of HIV-1 infection in this population. The persistent association between smoking and HIV-1 infection after adjustment for all known risk factors suggests the possibility of a biologic effect of smoking that warrants further evaluation in other populations.
确定先前观察到的海地女性中1型人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV-1)感染与吸烟之间的关联是否可由混杂的高危行为来解释。
在海地太阳城的一家初级保健健康诊所进行的巢式病例对照研究。
报告有吸烟史的女性(n = 89)以及1至12个月前参与过评估HIV-1感染危险因素调查的随机选择的非吸烟者(n = 329)。
终生性行为、吸烟情况、健康观念与行为以及其他可能混淆吸烟与HIV-1感染关系的因素。
与非吸烟者相比,吸烟者报告的高危行为发生率更高,包括终生性伴侣更多(P <.001)、结婚可能性更低(P <.01)以及更有可能看过民间治疗师(P <.01)。未报告有静脉吸毒情况,吸烟者与非吸烟者在过去手术或牙科手术或注射次数方面未发现显著差异。在回归分析中对与HIV-1感染和吸烟相关的所有因素进行调整后,显示吸烟与HIV-1感染之间存在独立关联(比值比[OR],3.4;95%置信区间[Cl],1.6至7.5)。与HIV-1感染相关的其他因素包括终生性伴侣超过两个(OR,3.4;95% Cl,1.7至6.8)以及家中地面为泥土地所反映的较低社会经济地位(OR, 8.6;95% Cl,3.3至22.0)。
吸烟是高危性行为的一个标志,并且与该人群中HIV-1感染风险增加相关联。在对所有已知危险因素进行调整后,吸烟与HIV-1感染之间持续存在的关联提示吸烟可能存在生物学效应,这值得在其他人群中进一步评估。