Time to First Cigarette, a Proxy of Nicotine Dependence, Increases the Risk of Pulmonary Impairment, Independently of Current and Lifetime Smoking Behavior

Conclusions: "Addicted" smoking, as measured by earlier TTFC, is associated with a markedly increased risk of spirometry-measured obstructive pulmonary impairment, and of reporting symptoms of coughing and phlegm, even after controlling for smoking behavior and other risk factors for COPD. TTFC may prove valuable in more precisely assessing smokers’ risk of pulmonary impairment. Implications: This study shows that smoking sooner after waking, a reliable indicator of ND, substantially increases the risk of spirometry-defined pulmonary impairment and self-reported symptoms, independently of lifetime and current smoking behavior. This study adds to a small body of literature examining health outcomes associated with higher ND, including outcomes of COPD. The current study overcomes important shortcomings of these existing studies in at least two ways: controlling for other known risk factors for COPD, and using empirical, spirometry-defined outcomes pulmonary function rather than self-reported COPD outcomes.
Source: Nicotine and Tobacco Research - Category: Addiction Authors: Tags: Original Investigation Source Type: research