Department of Internal Medicine, Molecular Diagnostics and Clinical Research Unit, University Hospital of Southern Denmark, Aabenraa, Denmark.
Section for Biostatistics and Evidence-Based Research, The Parker Institute, Bispebjerg and Frederiksberg Hospital, Frederiksberg, Denmark.
Scand J Immunol. 2024 Sep;100(3):e13395. doi: 10.1111/sji.13395. Epub 2024 Jul 7.
The prevalence and disease burden of chronic inflammatory diseases (CIDs) are predicted to rise. Patients are commonly treated with biological agents, but the individual treatment responses vary, warranting further research into optimizing treatment strategies. This study aimed to compare the clinical treatment responses in patients with CIDs initiating biologic therapy based on smoking status, a notorious risk factor in CIDs. In this multicentre cohort study including 233 patients with a diagnosis of Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, rheumatoid arthritis, axial spondyloarthritis, psoriatic arthritis or psoriasis initiating biologic therapy, we compared treatment response rates after 14 to 16 weeks and secondary outcomes between smokers and non-smokers. We evaluated the contrast between groups using logistic regression models: (i) a "crude" model, only adjusted for the CID type, and (ii) an adjusted model (including sex and age). Among the 205 patients eligible for this study, 53 (26%) were smokers. The treatment response rate among smokers (n = 23 [43%]) was lower compared to the non-smoking CID population (n = 92 [61%]), corresponding to a "crude" OR of 0.51 (95% CI: [0.26;1.01]) while adjusting for sex and age resulted in consistent findings: 0.51 [0.26;1.02]. The contrast was apparently most prominent among the 38 RA patients, with significantly lower treatment response rates for smokers in both the "crude" and adjusted models (adjusted OR 0.13, [0.02;0.81]). Despite a significant risk of residual confounding, patients with CIDs (rheumatoid arthritis in particular) should be informed that smoking probably lowers the odds of responding sufficiently to biological therapy. Registration: Clinical.Trials.gov NCT03173144.
慢性炎症性疾病(CIDs)的患病率和疾病负担预计将会上升。患者通常接受生物制剂治疗,但个体治疗反应存在差异,需要进一步研究以优化治疗策略。本研究旨在比较基于吸烟状况的 CIDs 患者在开始接受生物治疗时的临床治疗反应,吸烟是 CIDs 的一个显著危险因素。在这项包括 233 名患有克罗恩病、溃疡性结肠炎、类风湿关节炎、中轴型脊柱关节炎、银屑病关节炎或银屑病并开始接受生物治疗的患者的多中心队列研究中,我们比较了 14 至 16 周后治疗反应率和吸烟者与非吸烟者之间的次要结局。我们使用逻辑回归模型评估了两组之间的差异:(i)“原始”模型,仅根据 CID 类型进行调整,和(ii)调整模型(包括性别和年龄)。在符合本研究条件的 205 名患者中,有 53 名(26%)是吸烟者。吸烟者(n=23 [43%])的治疗反应率低于非吸烟 CID 人群(n=92 [61%]),对应的“原始”OR 为 0.51(95%CI:[0.26;1.01]),而调整性别和年龄后得到的结果一致:0.51 [0.26;1.02]。在 38 名 RA 患者中,这种差异最为明显,吸烟者在“原始”和调整模型中的治疗反应率均显著降低(调整 OR 0.13,[0.02;0.81])。尽管存在残余混杂的显著风险,但应告知 CIDs 患者(尤其是类风湿关节炎患者),吸烟可能会降低对生物治疗有足够反应的可能性。注册:Clinical.Trials.gov NCT03173144。