Demystifying Smoker's Paradox: A Propensity Score–Weighted Analysis in Patients Hospitalized With Acute Heart Failure

Author:

Doi Suhail A.1,Islam Nazmul1,Sulaiman Kadhim2,Alsheikh‐Ali Alawi A.3,Singh Rajvir4,Al‐Qahtani Awad4,Asaad Nidal4,AlHabib Khalid F.5,Al‐Zakwani Ibrahim6,Al‐Jarallah Mohammed7,AlMahmeed Wael8,Bulbanat Bassam7,Bazargani Nooshin9,Amin Haitham10,Al‐Motarreb Ahmed11,AlFaleh Husam5,Panduranga Prashanth2,Shehab Abdulla12,Al Suwaidi Jassim413,Salam Amar M.1413

Affiliation:

1. College of Medicine QU Health Qatar University Doha Qatar

2. Department of Cardiology Royal Hospital Muscat Oman

3. Mohammed Bin Rashid University of Medicine and Health Sciences Abu Dhabi United Arab Emirates

4. Hamad Medical Corporation Doha Qatar

5. Department of Cardiac Sciences King Fahad Cardiac Center King Saud University Riyadh Saudi Arabia

6. Department of Pharmacology and Clinical Pharmacy College of Medicine and Health Sciences Sultan Qaboos University Muscat Oman

7. Department of Cardiology Sabah Al‐Ahmed Cardiac Center ??? Kuwait

8. Sheikh Khalifa Medical City Abu Dhabi United Arab Emirates

9. Department of Cardiology Dubai Hospital Dubai United Arab Emirates

10. Department of Cardiology Mohammed Bin Khalifa Cardiac Center Manamah Bahrain

11. Department of Cardiology Faculty of Medicine Sana'a University Sana'a Yemen

12. College of Medicine and Health Sciences UAE University ??? United Arab Emirates

13. Weill Cornell Medical College Doha Qatar

Abstract

Background Smoker's paradox has been observed with several vascular disorders, yet there are limited data in patients with acute heart failure ( HF ). We examined the effects of smoking in patients with acute HF using data from a large multicenter registry. The objective was to determine if the design and analytic approach could explain the smoker's paradox in acute HF mortality. Methods and Results The data were sourced from the acute HF registry (Gulf CARE [Gulf Acute Heart Failure Registry]), a multicenter registry that recruited patients over 10 months admitted with a diagnosis of acute HF from 47 hospitals in 7 Middle Eastern countries. The association between smoking and mortality (in hospital) was examined using covariate adjustment, making use of mortality risk factors. A parallel analysis was performed using covariate balancing through propensity scores. Of 5005 patients hospitalized with acute HF , 1103 (22%) were current smokers. The in‐hospital mortality rates were significantly lower in current smoker's before (odds ratio, 0.71; 95% CI , 0.52–0.96) and more so after (odds ratio, 0.47; 95% CI , 0.31–0.70) covariate adjustment. With the propensity score–derived covariate balance, the smoking effect became much less certain (odds ratio, 0.63; 95% CI, 0.36–1.11). Conclusions The current study illustrates the fact that the smoker's paradox is likely to be a result of residual confounding as covariate adjustment may not resolve this if there are many competing prognostic confounders. In this situation, propensity score methods for covariate balancing seem preferable. Clinical Trial Registration URL : https://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ . Unique identifier: NCT 01467973.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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