دورية أكاديمية

Effect of Tobacco Smoking on the Clinical, Histopathological, and Serological Manifestations of Sjögren’s Syndrome

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Effect of Tobacco Smoking on the Clinical, Histopathological, and Serological Manifestations of Sjögren’s Syndrome
المؤلفون: Stone, Donald U., Fife, Dustin A., Brown, Michael, Earley, Keith E., Radfar, Lida, Kaufman, C. Erick, Lewis, David M., Rhodus, Nelson L., Segal, Barbara M., Wallace, Daniel J., Weisman, Michael H., Venuturupalli, Swamy, Brennan, Michael T.
المصدر: Faculty Scholarship for the College of Science & Mathematics
بيانات النشر: Rowan Digital Works
سنة النشر: 2017
المجموعة: Rowan University: Rowan Digital Works
مصطلحات موضوعية: Sjogren's Syndrome, tobacco smoking, Bioinformatics
الوصف: Objectives To assess the association of smoking habits with the clinical, serological, and histopathological manifestations of Sjögren’s syndrome (SS) and non-Sjögren’s sicca (non-SS sicca). Methods Cross-sectional case-control study of 1288 patients with sicca symptoms (587 SS and 701 non-SS sicca) evaluated in a multi-disciplinary research clinic. Smoking patterns were obtained from questionnaire data and disease-related clinical and laboratory data were compared between current, past, ever, and never smokers. Results Current smoking rates were 4.6% for SS patients compared to 14.1% in non-SS sicca (p = 5.17x10E-09), 18% in a local lupus cohort (p = 1.13x10E-14) and 16.8% in the community (p = 4.12x10E-15). Current smoking was protective against SS classification (OR 0.35, 95%CI 0.22–0.56, FDR q = 1.9E10-05), focal lymphocytic sialadenitis (OR 0.26, 95%CI 0.15–0.44, FDR q = 1.52x10E-06), focus score ≥1 (OR 0.22, 95%CI 0.13–0.39, FDR q = 1.43x10E-07), and anti-Ro/SSA(+) (OR 0.36, 95%CI 0.2–0.64, FDR q = 0.0009); ever smoking was protective against the same features and against anti-La/SSB(+) (OR 0.52, 95%CI 0.39–0.70, FDR q = 5.82x10E-05). Duration of smoking was inversely correlated with SS even after controlling for socioeconomic status, BMI, alcohol and caffeine consumption. Conclusions Current tobacco smoking is negatively and independently associated with SS, protecting against disease-associated humoral and cellular autoimmunity. The overall smoking rate amongst SS patients is significantly lower than in matched populations and the effects of smoking are proportional to exposure duration. In spite of the protective effects of tobacco on SS manifestations, it is associated with other serious comorbidities such as lung disease, cardiovascular risk and malignancy, and should thus be strongly discouraged in patients with sicca.
نوع الوثيقة: article in journal/newspaper
وصف الملف: application/pdf
اللغة: unknown
العلاقة: https://rdw.rowan.edu/csm_facpub/43Test; https://rdw.rowan.edu/context/csm_facpub/article/1042/viewcontent/Fife2017_PLOSEffect.pdfTest
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0170249
الإتاحة: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0170249Test
https://rdw.rowan.edu/csm_facpub/43Test
https://rdw.rowan.edu/context/csm_facpub/article/1042/viewcontent/Fife2017_PLOSEffect.pdfTest
حقوق: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0Test/
رقم الانضمام: edsbas.2CEFF544
قاعدة البيانات: BASE