Dransfield Mark T, Davis Jennifer J, Gerald Lynn B, Bailey William C
Division of Pulmonary, Allergy and Critical Care Medicine, The University of Alabama at Birmingham, 35294, USA.
Respir Med. 2006 Jun;100(6):1110-6. doi: 10.1016/j.rmed.2005.09.019. Epub 2005 Oct 19.
Although chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) has been considered a disease of Caucasian men, recent data show mortality rising faster among women and African-Americans. Some have suggested these groups are more susceptible to tobacco smoke. We examined this issue in our own population of COPD patients.
Beginning in March 2003 we prospectively developed a COPD research database to facilitate recruitment for clinical trials. Enrollees are recruited from clinics and paid advertising and their demographics, medical/smoking histories, and spirometric data are recorded. We examined the smoking histories and pulmonary function of enrollees over 45, with 20 pack-years of smoking, FEV(1)/FVC (forced expiratory volume forced vital capacity) <0.70, and a race-adjusted post-bronchodilator FEV(1)<80%. The primary outcome was the loss of lung function per pack-year smoked, or Susceptibility Index (SI), calculated using the formula: (% predicted FEV(1)-100)/pack-years.
A total of 585 patients enrolled during the study period and 330 met our inclusion criteria. Caucasians were older than African-Americans (63 vs. 58, P=0.0003) and had more pack-years of smoking (57 vs. 43, P=0.0003). There were no differences in lung function or bronchodilator reversibility among the racial or gender subgroups. Caucasians had less loss of lung function per pack-year smoked than African-Americans (SI=-1.02% vs. -1.34%, P=0.007) and men less than women (SI=-0.98% vs. -1.21%, P=0.001). Caucasian males appeared relatively protected from tobacco smoke (SI=-0.93%), while African-American women appeared most susceptible (SI=-1.42%).
There are important differences in racial and gender susceptibility to tobacco smoke among patients with COPD. African-American females appear to be at highest risk and may benefit most from smoking cessation.
尽管慢性阻塞性肺疾病(COPD)一直被认为是白种男性的疾病,但最近的数据显示,女性和非裔美国人的死亡率上升得更快。一些人认为这些群体对烟草烟雾更敏感。我们在自己的COPD患者群体中研究了这个问题。
从2003年3月开始,我们前瞻性地建立了一个COPD研究数据库,以方便招募参加临床试验的患者。参与者从诊所和付费广告中招募,记录他们的人口统计学信息、医疗/吸烟史以及肺功能数据。我们研究了年龄超过45岁、吸烟史达20包年、第一秒用力呼气容积/用力肺活量(FEV(1)/FVC)<0.70且支气管扩张剂后种族校正的FEV(1)<80%的参与者的吸烟史和肺功能。主要结局是每吸烟1包年的肺功能丧失,即易感性指数(SI),使用公式计算:(预测FEV(1)% - 100)/吸烟包年数。
在研究期间共有585名患者入组,330名符合我们的纳入标准。白种人比非裔美国人年龄更大(63岁对58岁,P = 0.0003),吸烟包年数更多(57对43,P = 0.0003)。种族或性别亚组之间在肺功能或支气管扩张剂可逆性方面没有差异。白种人每吸烟1包年的肺功能丧失比非裔美国人少(SI = -1.02%对 -1.34%,P = 0.007),男性比女性少(SI = -0.98%对 -1.21%,P = 0.001)。白种男性似乎相对受烟草烟雾影响较小(SI = -0.93%),而非裔美国女性似乎最易受影响(SI = -1.42%)。
COPD患者在种族和性别对烟草烟雾的易感性方面存在重要差异。非裔美国女性似乎风险最高,可能从戒烟中获益最大。