Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
University of Massachusetts School of Medicine, Worcester, and Boston University School of Medicine, Boston.
Arthritis Care Res (Hoboken). 2018 Jan;70(1):19-29. doi: 10.1002/acr.23269. Epub 2017 Dec 15.
To investigate whether rheumatoid arthritis (RA) diagnosis influences smoking behavior changes and whether these changes were associated with mortality.
We identified an incident RA cohort in the Nurses' Health Study (NHS; 1976-2012). Behavioral data were collected through biennial questionnaires. We created a comparison cohort, matching RA cases to women without RA by age and calendar year at the index date of RA diagnosis. To investigate smoking behavior changes in the early RA period, sustained cessation was defined as permanently quitting within 4 years of the RA/index date. We used Cox regression to obtain hazard ratios (HRs) for mortality, comparing sustained smoking cessation to continued smoking.
Among 121,700 women in the NHS, we identified 938 with incident RA matched to 8,951 non-RA comparators. Among current smokers, 40.0% with RA permanently quit smoking in the early RA period, compared to 36.1% of comparators (odds ratio for sustained cessation 1.18 [95% confidence interval (95% CI) 0.88, 1.58]). There were 313 deaths (33.4%) in the RA cohort and 2,042 (22.8%) among comparators. Compared to continued smoking, sustained cessation was associated with similarly decreased mortality in both the RA (HR 0.58 [95% CI 0.33, 1.01]) and comparison (HR 0.47 [95% CI 0.39, 0.58]) cohorts. Women with RA had higher mortality for >5 post-RA pack-years (HR 3.67 [95% CI 2.80, 4.81]) than comparators with >5 post-index pack-years (HR 1.88 [95% CI 1.62, 2.17]; P < 0.001 for interaction; reference: ever-smoker non-RA women with 0 post-index pack-years).
Sustained smoking cessation within 4 years of RA diagnosis reduced mortality risk, with a similar effect observed among non-RA comparators. Smoking >5 pack-years after RA diagnosis significantly increased mortality beyond the risk of non-RA comparators.
研究类风湿关节炎(RA)诊断是否会影响吸烟行为的改变,以及这些改变是否与死亡率相关。
我们在护士健康研究(NHS;1976-2012 年)中确定了一个新发 RA 队列。行为数据通过每两年一次的问卷调查收集。我们创建了一个对照队列,通过 RA 诊断索引日期的年龄和日历年来匹配 RA 病例和没有 RA 的女性。为了研究早期 RA 期间的吸烟行为变化,持续戒烟被定义为在 RA/索引日期后 4 年内永久戒烟。我们使用 Cox 回归获得死亡率的风险比(HR),将持续吸烟与持续吸烟进行比较。
在 NHS 的 121700 名女性中,我们确定了 938 名新发 RA 患者,与 8951 名非 RA 对照者相匹配。在当前吸烟者中,40.0%的 RA 患者在早期 RA 期间永久戒烟,而对照者为 36.1%(持续戒烟的比值比 1.18[95%置信区间(95%CI)0.88,1.58])。RA 队列中有 313 例死亡(33.4%),对照者中有 2042 例(22.8%)。与持续吸烟相比,持续戒烟与 RA(HR 0.58[95%CI 0.33,1.01])和对照(HR 0.47[95%CI 0.39,0.58])队列的死亡率降低相似相关。RA 后 >5 个 RR 年(HR 3.67[95%CI 2.80,4.81])的女性比对照者 >5 个 RR 年后(HR 1.88[95%CI 1.62,2.17];交互作用 P<0.001;参考:有 0 个 RR 年后包年的既往吸烟者非 RA 女性)的死亡率更高。
RA 诊断后 4 年内持续戒烟可降低死亡率风险,非 RA 对照者中观察到相似的效果。RA 诊断后 >5 个 RR 年吸烟显著增加了非 RA 对照者的死亡率风险。