1. Smoking paradox in the development of psoriatic arthritis among patients with psoriasis: a population-based study
- Author
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Jingbo Niu, Hyon K. Choi, Uyen-Sa D. T. Nguyen, Yuqing Zhang, Qiong Louie-Gao, Jeffrey A. Sparks, Na Lu, Michael P. LaValley, Elizabeth W. Karlson, Joel M. Gelfand, Alexis Ogdie, and Maureen Dubreuil
- Subjects
030203 arthritis & rheumatology ,education.field_of_study ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Immunology ,Population ,Confounding ,medicine.disease ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Population based study ,03 medical and health sciences ,Psoriatic arthritis ,0302 clinical medicine ,Increased risk ,Rheumatology ,Psoriasis ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Physical therapy ,Immunology and Allergy ,030212 general & internal medicine ,education ,Unmeasured confounding ,business ,Survival analysis - Abstract
ObjectivesSmoking is associated with an increased risk of psoriatic arthritis (PsA) in the general population, but not among patients with psoriasis. We sought to clarify the possible methodological mechanisms behind this paradox.MethodsUsing 1995–2015 data from The Health Improvement Network, we performed survival analysis to examine the association between smoking and incident PsA in the general population and among patients with psoriasis. We clarified the paradox using mediation analysis and conducted bias sensitivity analyses to evaluate the potential impact of index event bias and quantify its magnitude from uncontrolled/unmeasured confounders.ResultsOf 6.65 million subjects without PsA at baseline, 225 213 participants had psoriasis and 7057 developed incident PsA. Smoking was associated with an increased risk of PsA in the general population (HR 1.27; 95% CI 1.19 to 1.36), but with a decreased risk among patients with psoriasis (HR 0.91; 95% CI 0.84 to 0.99). Mediation analysis showed that the effect of smoking on the risk of PsA was mediated almost entirely through its effect on psoriasis. Bias-sensitivity analyses indicated that even when the relation of uncontrolled confounders to either smoking or PsA was modest (both HRs=~1.5), it could reverse the biased effect of smoking among patients with psoriasis (HR=0.9).ConclusionsIn this large cohort representative of the UK general population, smoking was positively associated with PsA risk in the general population, but negatively associated among patients with psoriasis. Conditioning on a causal intermediate variable (psoriasis) may even reverse the association between smoking and PsA, potentially explaining the smoking paradox for the risk of PsA among patients with psoriasis.
- Published
- 2017
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