Garrison-Desany Henri M, Ladd-Acosta Christine, Hong Xiumei, Wang Guoying, Burd Irina, Sanchez Zila van der Meer, Wang Xiaobin, Surkan Pamela J
Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Center on the Early Life Origins of Disease, Department of Population, Family and Reproductive Health, Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Precis Nutr. 2023 May 24;2(2):e00035. doi: 10.1097/PN9.0000000000000035. eCollection 2023 Jun.
Smoking during pregnancy has been associated with reduced risk of a spectrum of hypertensive (HTN) disorders, known as the "smoking-hypertension paradox."
We sought to test potential epidemiologic explanations for the smoking-hypertension paradox.
We analyzed 8510 pregnant people in the Boston Birth Cohort, including 4027 non-Hispanic Black and 2428 Hispanic pregnancies. Study participants self-reported tobacco, alcohol, cannabis, opioids, or cocaine use during pregnancy. We used logistic regression to assess effect modification by race/ethnicity, and confounding of concurrent substances on hypertensive disorders or prior pregnancy. We also investigated early gestational age as a collider or competing risk for pre-eclampsia, using cause-specific Cox models and Fine-Gray models, respectively.
We replicated the paradox showing smoking to be protective against hypertensive disorders among Black participants who used other substances as well (aOR: 0.61, 95% CI: 0.41, 0.93), but observed null effects for Hispanic participants (aOR: 1.14, 95% CI: 0.55, 2.36). In our cause-specific Cox regression, the effects of tobacco use were reduced to null effects with pre-eclampsia (aOR: 0.81, 95% CI: 0.63, 1.04) after stratifying for preterm birth. For the Fine-Gray competing risk analysis, the paradoxical associations remained. The smoking paradox was either not observed or reversed after accounting for race/ethnicity, other substance use, and collider-stratification due to preterm birth.
These findings offer new insights into this paradox and underscore the importance of considering multiple sources of bias in assessing the smoking-hypertension association in pregnancy.
孕期吸烟与一系列高血压疾病风险降低有关,这一现象被称为“吸烟 - 高血压悖论”。
我们试图检验对吸烟 - 高血压悖论可能的流行病学解释。
我们分析了波士顿出生队列中的8510名孕妇,其中包括4027名非西班牙裔黑人孕妇和2428名西班牙裔孕妇。研究参与者自行报告了孕期使用烟草、酒精、大麻、阿片类药物或可卡因的情况。我们使用逻辑回归来评估种族/族裔的效应修正,以及同时使用其他物质对高血压疾病或既往妊娠的混杂影响。我们还分别使用特定病因的Cox模型和Fine - Gray模型,将孕早期作为子痫前期的对撞因素或竞争风险进行了研究。
我们重现了这一悖论,即吸烟对同时使用其他物质的黑人参与者的高血压疾病具有保护作用(调整后比值比:0.61,95%置信区间:0.41,0.93),但西班牙裔参与者未观察到这种效应(调整后比值比:1.14,95%置信区间:0.55,2.36)。在我们的特定病因Cox回归中,在对早产进行分层后,吸烟对子痫前期的影响降至无效(调整后比值比:0.81,95%置信区间:0.63,1.04)。对于Fine - Gray竞争风险分析,这种矛盾关联仍然存在。在考虑种族/族裔、其他物质使用以及由于早产导致的对撞分层后,吸烟悖论要么未被观察到,要么被逆转。
这些发现为这一悖论提供了新的见解,并强调了在评估孕期吸烟与高血压关联时考虑多种偏倚来源的重要性。