Publication | Closed Access
Hospitalizations and Mortality in the Lung Health Study
588
Citations
10
References
2002
Year
AsthmaHeart FailurePulmonary CareAdvanced Lung DiseasePharmacotherapyRespiratory DiseaseTobacco ControlLung Health StudyPulmonary PharmacologyPublic HealthSmoking Related Lung DiseaseOutcomes ResearchPulmonary MedicineLung CancerPulmonary DiseaseCardiovascular DiseasePatient SafetyMedicineAnesthesiology
This report deals with deaths and hospitalizations during the 5-year Lung Health Study, as documented by examination of appropriate records. There were 149 deaths (2.5%) during the study, caused largely by lung cancer and cardiovascular disease, particularly coronary heart disease. A total of 12.8% of participants were hospitalized, with cancer, cardiovascular disease, and nonmalignant respiratory disease accounting for 75% of hospitalizations. There were no significant differences among the original treatment groups for all-cause mortality, lung cancer, or hospitalizations for respiratory disease. Deaths and hospitalizations for cardiovascular disease and coronary artery disease were more common in the smoking intervention plus Atrovent inhaler (SI-A) group, which received ipratropium bromide, than in the smoking intervention plus placebo inhaler (SI-P) group, which received placebo, and the differences approached statistical significance. However, we were unable to find a dose effect, in that differences were not related to self-reported inhaler compliance. In the SI-A group, nine participants were hospitalized for supraventricular tachycardia as compared with two in the SI-P group, and SI-A participants with this condition were unusually compliant with their inhaled medication. When all participants were considered and smoking status considered as a time-dependent covariate, smoking cessation was associated with significant reductions in fatal or nonfatal cardiovascular disease and coronary artery disease.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1