University of Tasmania
Browse

Smoking and COVID-19: what we know so far

Version 2 2024-09-18, 23:36
Version 1 2023-05-20, 19:38
journal contribution
posted on 2024-09-18, 23:36 authored by Madhur ShastriMadhur Shastri, SD Shukla, WC Chong, Rajendra KCRajendra KC, K Dua, Rahul PatelRahul Patel, Gregory PetersonGregory Peterson, RF O'Toole

The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has placed a spotlight on infectious diseases and their associations with host factors and underlying conditions. New data on the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) virus are entering the public domain at a rapid rate such that their distillation often lags behind. To minimise weak associations becoming perceived as established paradigms, it is imperative that methodologies and outputs from different studies are appropriately critiqued and compared. In this review, we examine recent data on a potential relationship between smoking and COVID-19. While the causal role of smoking has been firmly demonstrated in regard to lung cancer and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, such associations have the benefit of decades' worth of multi-centre epidemiological and mechanistic data. From our analysis of the available studies to date, it appears that a relationship is emerging in regard to patients with a smoking history having a higher likelihood of developing more severe symptoms of COVID-19 disease than non-smokers. Data on whether COVID-19 has a greater incidence in smokers than non-smokers is thus far, contradictory and inconclusive. There is therefore a need for some caution to be exercised until further research has been conducted in a wider range of geographical settings with sufficient numbers of patients that have been carefully phenotyped in respect of smoking status and adequate statistical control for confounding factors.

History

Publication title

Respiratory Medicine

Volume

176

Article number

106237

Number

106237

Pagination

1-7

ISSN

0954-6111

Department/School

Medicine, Pharmacy

Publisher

W B Saunders Co Ltd

Publication status

  • Published

Place of publication

32 Jamestown Rd, London, England, Nw1 7By

Rights statement

Copyright 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved

Socio-economic Objectives

200104 Prevention of human diseases and conditions, 200412 Preventive medicine

UN Sustainable Development Goals

3 Good Health and Well Being