Division of Epidemiology and Community Health, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, 55454, USA.
Lancet. 2011 Oct 8;378(9799):1297-305. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(11)60781-2. Epub 2011 Aug 10.
Prevalence of smoking is increasing in women in some populations and is a risk factor for coronary heart disease. Whether smoking confers the same excess risk of coronary heart disease for women as it does for men is unknown. Therefore, we aimed to estimate the effect of smoking on coronary heart disease in women compared with men after accounting for sex differences in other major risk factors.
We undertook a systematic review and meta-analysis of prospective cohort studies published between Jan 1, 1966, and Dec 31, 2010, from four online databases. We selected cohort studies that were stratified by sex with measures of relative risk (RR), and associated variability, for coronary heart disease and current smoking compared with not smoking. We pooled data with a random effects model with inverse variance weighting, and estimated RR ratios (RRRs) between men and women.
We reviewed 8005 abstracts and included 26 articles with data for 3,912,809 individuals and 67,075 coronary heart disease events from 86 prospective trials. In 75 cohorts (2·4 million participants) that adjusted for cardiovascular risk factors other than coronary heart disease, the pooled adjusted female-to-male RRR of smoking compared with not smoking for coronary heart disease was 1·25 (95% CI 1·12-1·39, p<0·0001). This outcome was unchanged after adjustment for potential publication bias and there was no evidence of important between-study heterogeneity (p=0·21). The RRR increased by 2% for every additional year of study follow-up (p=0·03). In pooled data from 53 studies, there was no evidence of a sex difference in the RR between participants who had previously smoked compared with those who never had (RRR 0·96, 95% CI 0·86-1·08, p=0·53).
Whether mechanisms underlying the sex difference in risk of coronary heart disease are biological or related to differences in smoking behaviour between men and women is unclear. Tobacco-control programmes should consider women, particularly in those countries where smoking among young women is increasing in prevalence.
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在一些人群中,女性吸烟的比例正在增加,并且是冠心病的一个危险因素。目前尚不清楚吸烟对女性冠心病的风险是否与男性相同。因此,我们旨在估计在考虑到其他主要危险因素的性别差异后,吸烟对女性冠心病的影响与男性相比。
我们对 1966 年 1 月 1 日至 2010 年 12 月 31 日期间发表在四个在线数据库中的前瞻性队列研究进行了系统回顾和荟萃分析。我们选择了按性别分层的队列研究,这些研究对冠心病和当前吸烟与不吸烟进行了相对风险(RR)的衡量,并对其进行了分析。我们使用逆方差加权的随机效应模型合并数据,并估计了男性和女性之间的 RR 比值(RRR)。
我们查阅了 8005 篇摘要,纳入了 26 篇文章的数据,这些文章来自 86 项前瞻性试验,涉及 3912809 人,发生 67075 例冠心病事件。在 75 项(240 万人)调整了除冠心病以外的心血管危险因素的队列中,与不吸烟相比,调整后吸烟对女性冠心病的汇总调整后 RR 比值为 1.25(95% CI 1.12-1.39,p<0.0001)。在调整了潜在的发表偏倚后,这一结果保持不变,而且没有证据表明研究之间存在显著的异质性(p=0.21)。研究随访时间每增加一年,RRR 增加 2%(p=0.03)。在来自 53 项研究的汇总数据中,有证据表明,与从不吸烟的人相比,曾经吸烟的人之间的 RR 没有性别差异(RRR 0.96,95% CI 0.86-1.08,p=0.53)。
导致冠心病风险性别差异的机制是生物学的还是与男性和女性之间吸烟行为的差异有关尚不清楚。烟草控制计划应考虑到女性,尤其是在那些年轻女性吸烟比例正在增加的国家。
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