4.6 Article

A Bayesian meta-analysis on early tobacco exposure and vascular health: From childhood to early adulthood

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PREVENTIVE CARDIOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 12, Pages 1315-1322

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1177/2047487319883557

Keywords

Smoking; vascular disease; adolescence; childhood

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This study found that smoking exposure is associated with early vascular damage in children and adolescents, affecting indices such as flow-mediated dilatation, pulse wave velocity, and carotid intima-media thickness. Both active and passive smoking were shown to have a negative impact on arterial health, emphasizing the importance of preventing smoking exposure in young age groups.
Background Smoking has been consistently associated with increased cardiovascular risk in adults. Although exposure to tobacco products often starts in early life, evidence for the possible adverse effects on the cardiovascular system of the young is scarce. We sought to derive pooled estimates of smoking effects on indices of early vascular damage in children and adolescents. Design and methods We performed a systematic review and meta-analysis of clinical studies involving young individuals up to 21 years old that provided data on smoking exposure (active or passive) and flow-mediated dilatation, carotid to femoral pulse wave velocity and maximum carotid intima-media thickness. We employed three distinct methodologies of random-effects data synthesis, including the Sidik-Jonkman estimator, the Hartung and Knapp correction and a Bayesian method with a well-informed prior on the level of between-study variance. Results In 12 studies and 5279 individuals in total, smoking exposure ws related to deterioration in all three outcomes (mean adjusted flow-mediated dilatation decrease: -0.77%, 95% confidence interval -1.38--0.15, mean adjusted pulse wave velocity increase: 0.1 m/s, 95% confidence interval 0.02-0.17 and mean adjusted carotid intima-media thickness increase: 0.35 mm, 95% confidence interval 0.16-0.55, for the Sidik-Jonkman estimator). No difference was established between active and passive smoking on associations with arterial damage. Conclusions Exposure to tobacco products is associated with subclinical vascular damage early in life, even from childhood. Public health initiatives should target these very young age groups to prevent early smoking exposure and associated arterial damage and its sequelae.

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