4.0 Article

Associations of Cigarette Smoking With Rheumatoid Arthritis in African Americans

Journal

ARTHRITIS AND RHEUMATISM
Volume 62, Issue 12, Pages 3560-3568

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/art.27716

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Funding

  1. Nebraska Arthritis Outcomes Research Center
  2. NIH (National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases) [R03-AR-054539, K23-AR-050004, M01-RR-00046, UL1-RR-02547, N01-AR-02247, N01-AR-6-2278]
  3. National organization
  4. Veterans Affairs Office of Research and Development
  5. NIH/NCRR [M01-RR-00032]
  6. University of Alabama at Birmingham General Clinical Research Center

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Objective. To examine the associations of cigarette smoking with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) in African Americans, and to determine whether this association is impacted by the HLA-DRB1 shared epitope (SE). Methods. Smoking status, cumulative smoking exposure, and SE status were determined in African American patients with RA and African American healthy controls. Associations of smoking with RA were examined using age-and sex-adjusted logistic regression analyses. Additive and multiplicative SE-smoking interactions were examined. Results. After adjustment for age and sex, ever smoking (odds ratio [OR] 1.45, 95% confidence interval [95% CI] 1.07, 1.97) and current smoking (OR 1.56, 95% CI 1.07, 2.26), relative to never smoking, were more common in African American patients with RA (n = 605) than in controls (n = 255). The association of smoking with RA was limited to those with a cumulative exposure exceeding 10 pack-years, associations that were evident both in autoantibody-positive and in autoantibody-negative disease. There was evidence of a significant additive interaction between SE status and heavy smoking (>= 10 pack-years) in relation to RA risk (attributable proportion [AP] due to interaction 0.58, P = 0.007), with similar results for the additive interaction between SE status and ever smoking (AP 0.47, P = 0.006). There was no evidence of multiplicative interactions. Conclusion. Among African Americans, cigarette smoking is associated not only with the risk of autoantibody-positive RA but also with the risk of autoantibody-negative disease. The risk of RA attributable to smoking is limited to African Americans with more than 10 pack-years of exposure and is more pronounced among individuals positive for the HLA-DRB1 SE.

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