Smoking and Mortality Among Women With Type 2 Diabetes

Author:

Al-Delaimy Wael K.1,Willett Walter C.123,Manson JoAnn E.234,Speizer Frank E.3,Hu Frank B.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Nutrition, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston

2. Department of Epidemiology, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston

3. Channing Laboratory, Division of Preventive Medicine, Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston

4. Division of Preventive Medicine, Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts

Abstract

OBJECTIVE—To assess the relationship between cigarette smoking and mortality among women with type 2 diabetes in the Nurses’ Health Study cohort. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—The Nurses’ Health Study, a prospective cohort of U.S. female registered nurses, included 7,401 women with type 2 diabetes diagnosed at baseline or during follow-up from 1976 to 1996. Total and cause-specific mortality of these diabetic women were the outcomes of interest. RESULTS—We documented 724 deaths during 20 years of follow-up (67,420 person-years) among women with type 2 diabetes. In multivariate analyses, adjusting for age, history of high blood pressure and high cholesterol, and other cardiovascular risk factors, compared with never smokers, the RRs of mortality were 1.31 (95% CI 1.11–1.55) for past smokers, 1.43 (0.96–2.14) for current smokers of 1–14 cigarettes/day, 1.64 (1.24–2.17) for current smokers of 15–34 cigarettes/day, and 2.19 (1.32–3.65) for current smokers of ≥35 cigarettes/day (P for trend = 0.0002). Women with type 2 diabetes who had stopped smoking for ≥10 years had a mortality RR of 1.11 (0.92–1.35) compared with diabetic women who were never smokers. CONCLUSIONS—Cigarette smoking is associated in a dose-response manner with an increased mortality among women with type 2 diabetes. Furthermore, quitting smoking appears to decrease this excess risk substantially. Diabetes patients should be strongly advised against smoking.

Publisher

American Diabetes Association

Subject

Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

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