Selya Arielle S, Hesse Naa Dede
Master of Public Health Program, Department of Population Health, University of North Dakota, United States.
Master of Public Health Program, Department of Population Health, University of North Dakota, United States.
Soc Sci Med. 2017 Feb;174:213-219. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2016.12.014. Epub 2016 Dec 30.
Cigarette smoking is a primary cause of cardiovascular disease (CVD); however, prior research has rarely distinguished smoking behavior from nicotine dependence.
The current study presents a novel investigation into whether time to first cigarette (TTFC), a reliable proxy for nicotine dependence, is associated with lipid cholesterol, a biomarker for CVD, after controlling for smoking behavior and other risk factors.
In total, 3903 current adult smokers were drawn from four consecutive cross-sectional waves (2005-06, 2007-08, 2009-10, and 2011-12) of the National Health and Nutrition Survey (NHANES). Weighted regressions were used to examine whether earlier TTFC is associated with differences in a) numeric values; b) guideline-based binary outcomes of total cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein (HDL), low-density lipoprotein (LDL), and the LDL/HDL ratio; and c) 10-year risk scores for CVD.
Earlier TTFC (within 5, 30, or 60 min vs. >60 min) was significantly (p < 0.05) associated with lower HDL (2-3 mg/dL) and a lower odds ratio (OR = 0.70) of having optimal HDL levels, and a lower LDL/HDL ratio (0.14-0.32); these results were consistent across three models (unadjusted, adjusted for smoking behavior, and also adjusted for demographics and other CVD risk factors). Earlier TTFC was also associated (p < 0.05) with higher odds of having sub-optimal total cholesterol levels (OR = 1.55) and higher LDL values (8 mg/dL), but only in the models adjusting for smoking behavior. However, the association of TTFC with 10-year CVD risk scores did not reach significance (p > 0.05).
More "addicted" smokers, as indicated by earlier TTFC, have less favorable lipid profiles, even after accounting for current and lifetime smoking history and other CVD risk factors. Future research should further explore whether TTFC could be a useful tool for refining clinically significant CVD risk among smokers.
吸烟是心血管疾病(CVD)的主要病因;然而,既往研究很少区分吸烟行为和尼古丁依赖。
本研究进行了一项新的调查,在控制吸烟行为和其他风险因素后,首次吸烟时间(TTFC)这一尼古丁依赖的可靠指标是否与CVD生物标志物血脂胆固醇相关。
总共从国家健康与营养调查(NHANES)连续四个横断面调查周期(2005 - 06年、2007 - 08年、2009 - 10年和2011 - 12年)中抽取了3903名成年吸烟者。采用加权回归分析来检验更早的TTFC是否与以下方面的差异相关:a)数值;b)基于指南的总胆固醇、高密度脂蛋白(HDL)、低密度脂蛋白(LDL)以及LDL/HDL比值的二元结局;c)CVD的10年风险评分。
更早的TTFC(5分钟内、30分钟内或60分钟内 vs. >60分钟)与较低的HDL(低2 - 3mg/dL)以及HDL水平达到最佳的较低比值比(OR = 0.70)和较低的LDL/HDL比值(低0.14 - 0.32)显著相关(p < 0.05);这些结果在三个模型(未调整、调整吸烟行为以及同时调整人口统计学和其他CVD风险因素)中均一致。更早的TTFC还与总胆固醇水平未达最佳的较高比值比(OR = 1.55)和较高的LDL值(高8mg/dL)相关(p < 0.05),但仅在调整吸烟行为的模型中如此。然而,TTFC与10年CVD风险评分的关联未达到显著水平(p > 0.05)。
如更早的TTFC所示,更多“成瘾”的吸烟者即使在考虑当前和终生吸烟史以及其他CVD风险因素后,其血脂状况也更不理想。未来研究应进一步探索TTFC是否可能成为优化吸烟者临床显著CVD风险的有用工具。