Publication | Open Access
Relationships of active smoking to asthma and asthma severity in the EGEA study
388
Citations
24
References
2000
Year
The study examined whether smoking acts as a risk, selection, or severity modifier for asthma in the EGEA cohort. The analysis included 200 adult asthmatic cases, 265 nonasthmatic controls, and 586 relatives of asthmatics (147 with asthma). The study found that smoking is not a risk factor for adult asthma onset, but active smoking is linked to greater asthma severity, with current smokers reporting more symptoms, frequent attacks, and higher severity scores, while childhood asthma and smoking habits showed no clear associations.
The role of smoking as potential risk factor, selection factor ("healthy smoker" effect) and modifying factor (severity) of asthma was studied in the Epidemiological study on the Genetics and Environment of Asthma, bronchial hyperresponsiveness and atopy (EGEA). The analysis involved 200 adult asthmatic cases recruited in chest clinics, 265 nonasthmatic controls and 586 relatives of asthmatics (147 with asthma). Asthma in childhood was not associated with a reduced take-up of smoking (odds ratio (OR)=1.06 in males and 0.98 in females), but smoker asthmatic cases quit more often than controls (OR = 2.20 (95% confidence interval (95% CI) 1.11-4.34) in males and 2.76 (1.19-6.42) in females). Adult onset asthma was unrelated to ever smoking (OR 1.07 in males and 1.02 in females). In asthmatic cases, active smoking was associated with asthma severity. Current smokers, compared to never and exsmokers, had more asthma symptoms, more frequent (> or =1 attack x day(-1)) asthma attacks (OR 2.39 (95% CI 1.06-5.36)) and higher asthma severity scores. No clear pattern regarding the relationships of smoking habits with asthma was observed in first degree relatives. It is concluded that active smoking is not a risk factor for asthma in adulthood, but that smoking increases asthma severity.
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