smoking and health

41
Smoking and health Dr. Ashok Kumar Kapoor MBBS, MD (Med.), DM (Car.), F.Card (Germany), FCCP (US), Chairman Getwell Medical Center & Curewell Diagnostic Center, www.getwelluae.com

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Page 1: Smoking and health

Smoking and health

Dr. Ashok Kumar KapoorMBBS, MD (Med.), DM (Car.), F.Card (Germany), FCCP (US),

Chairman

Getwell Medical Center & Curewell Diagnostic Center,

www.getwelluae.com

Page 2: Smoking and health

Smoking as nicotine dependence

• Nicotine the driving force

• As with other drugs, complex interplay between pharmacology, learning mechanisms, social and economic influences in determining patterns of use

http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 3: Smoking and health

The major health consequences of smoking

• Cancer– lung– mouth, larynx, throat, oesophagus– bladder, cervix, kidney, pancreas

• COPD• Coronary heart disease• Stroke• Peripheral vascular disease• Pregnancy and birth complications

http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 4: Smoking and health

Mortality associated with smoking

• At least 320 deaths every day from smoking in the UK, 120,000 per year

• 1/5 all deaths across all ages• 1/4 all deaths in age group 35-64 years• 1 in 2 lifetime risk for smokers• 7.5 years average loss of life expectancy• Over half of the difference in risk of death in middle

age between professional and unskilled men• 4 million deaths worldwide

http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 5: Smoking and health

1950 1975 2000 2025 2050

Year

0

100

200

300

400

500

Cu

mu

lati

ve d

eath

s fr

om

to

bac

co (

mil

lio

ns)

Scenarios for future deaths from tobacco

Trend

520

70

220

Source: Peto et al http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 6: Smoking and health

Smoking is highly addictive

• At least 70% of smokers want to give up• Less than half succeed before age 65• 40% of heart attack smokers relapse while still in

hospital within 2 days of intensive care• 50% of patients with laryngectomies try smoking

again• 50% of patients with lung removed for lung cancer

smoke again• More than half of heroin and cocaine users and

alcoholics rate smoking harder to quit

http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 7: Smoking and health

Addiction

http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 8: Smoking and health

Starting point - the cigarette

“The cigarette should be conceived not as a product but as a package. The product is nicotine. Think of the cigarette pack as a storage container for a day’s supply of nicotine….Think of the cigarette as the dispenser for a dose unit of nicotine…..Smoke is beyond question the most optimised vehicle of nicotine and the cigarette the most optimised dispenser of smoke”.

William Dunn, Philip Morris, 1972http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 9: Smoking and health

-10 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70

Time (mins)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

Nic

oti

ne C

on

cen

trati

on

(n

g/m

l)

Schematic Diagramof Arterial vs Venous

Nicotine Levels

Venous

Arterial

cigarette

smoked http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 10: Smoking and health

Nicotine Addiction in Britain

Royal College of Physicians Feb 2000

• “Nicotine delivered rapidly to the brain in cigarette smoke should be recognised as a powerfully addictive drug on a par with heroin and cocaine, and tobacco products should be recognised as nicotine delivery systems.”

Central conclusion: smoking is best understood as nicotine seeking behaviour

http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 11: Smoking and health

Rating IV nicotine and cocaine:Jones et al (1999)

• Compared 3 doses of cocaine and nicotine given IV double-blind + saline placebo

• Nicotine ‘high’ and ‘rush’ rated stronger than cocaine, also ‘jittery’

• Nicotine frequently misidentified as cocaine, and, at highest dose, an opiate

http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 12: Smoking and health

0 10 20 30 40

Prevalence of regular drug use:adults aged 16-64, GB 1993-1994

32

22

2

0

0

0

0

0

Cigarette smoking %

Drinking above

recommended limits

Marijuana

Tranquillizers

sleeping pills

Amphetamines

Opiates

Cocaine

Psychedelics

hallucinogens

OPCS Psychiatric Morbidity Survey: Meltzer et al 1995 Base n=9792

Regular drug user = every day for 2 weeks or more in past 12 monthshttp://www.getwelluae.com

Page 13: Smoking and health

Abstainer Occasional Light Moderate Fairly heavy Heavy Very heavy0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

Ne

uro

tic

dis

ord

er

%Neurotic disorder % by drinking habits

GB 1993-1994

Alcohol drinking habitshttp://www.getwelluae.com

Page 14: Smoking and health

Never smoker Ex 3-4 5-6 7-8 9-10 11-12 13-140

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

Ne

uro

tic

dis

ord

er

%Neurotic disorder % by smoking habits

GB 1993-1994

Tobacco dependence scorehttp://www.getwelluae.com

Page 15: Smoking and health

Nicotine as a drug of dependence

• Blood nicotine from cigarettes, snuff (oral and nasal) and cigars very similar

• IV nicotine suppresses smoking

• Nicotine intakes from different brands of cigarette very similar

http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 16: Smoking and health

Nicotine as a drug of dependence

• Nicotine withdrawal syndrome

• Effect of nicotine replacement on successful quitting

http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 17: Smoking and health

Self-assertion . . .“To account for the fact that the beginning smoker will tolerate the unpleasantness we must invoke a psychosocial motive. Smoking a cigarette for the beginner is a symbolic act. The smoker is telling his world, 'This is the kind of person I am.' Surely there are variants of this theme, 'I am no longer my mother's child,' 'I am tough,' 'I am not a square.' Whatever the individual intent, the act of smoking remains a symbolic declaration of personal identity . . .” Philip Morris (Bates no. 1003287836)

http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 18: Smoking and health

. . . and addiction

“ . . . As the force from the psychosocial symbolism subsides,

the pharmacological effect takes over to sustain the habit . . .”

Philip Morris 1969 document (Bates no. 1003287836)

http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 19: Smoking and health

Addiction -

http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 20: Smoking and health

Factors favouring study of smoking as compared with other drug taking

behaviours

• High prevalence

• Legal

• Little stigma, so self-reports largely accurate

• Unlike alcohol, excellent biomarker of intake available

http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 21: Smoking and health

Cotinine as a biomarker of nicotine intake

• Main nicotine metabolite (70-80% converted)

• Half-life 16-20 hours

• Measurable in saliva, blood or urine

• Quantitative measure of nicotine intake: 10ng/ml cotinine in blood ~ 1mg nicotine daily

http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 22: Smoking and health

Brief dependence scale

1. How soon after waking do you smoke yourfirst cigarette of the day?

Less than Between Between Between Between Longer5 minutes 5 and 15 15 and 30 30 min. 1 and 2 than 2

minutes minutes and 1 hr hours hours

2. How easy or difficult would you find it to gowithout smoking for a whole day?

Very easy Fairly easy Fairly difficult Very difficult

3. How many cigarettes do you usually smokeeach day?

1-10 11-20 21-30 31+

http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 23: Smoking and health

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

Per

cen

tag

e o

f sm

oke

rs

DISTRIBUTION OF TIME TO FIRST CIGARETTEIN SMOKERS IN PRIMARY CARE

"How soon after waking do you smokeyour first cigarette of the day?"

Less than

5 minutes

5-15

minutes

15-30

minutes

30 min

to 1 hr

1 to 2

hours

More than

2 hours

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

400

450

Sal

iva

coti

nin

e (n

g/m

l)

Mean + 95% CI-

TIME TO FIRST CIGARETTE OF THE DAY

Less than

5 minutes5-15

minutes

15-30

minutes

30 min

to 1 hr

1 to 2

hours

More than

2 hours

n=307n=182n=214n=205n=322n=260

http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 24: Smoking and health

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 110

110

220

330

440

550

Sa

liv

a c

oti

nin

e (

ng

/ml)

SALIVA COTININE BY DEPENDENCE INSMOKERS IN PRIMARY CARE

Mean + 95% CI

DEPENDENCE SCALE SCORE

N = 160 108 381431361491209996108130 73

http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 25: Smoking and health

0 1 -4 5 -9 1 0 -1 4 1 5 -1 9 2 0 -2 4 2 5 -2 9 3 0 +0

1

3

Pla

sma

cotin

ine

(ng/

ml)

P ar tner 's daily cigar ette consum ption

Geometric mean ± 95%CI

0 .5

2

http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 26: Smoking and health

0 1-4 5-9 10-14 15-19 20-24 25-29 30+0.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5

Pla

sm

a c

oti

nin

e (

ng

/ml)

PASSIVE SMOKING: COTININE IN ADULTSBY PARTNER'S CIGARETTE CONSUMPTION

Partner's daily cigarette consumption

Geometric mean + 95%CI

Health Survey for England

1994 &1996

8328 234 231 259 155 294 79n= 60http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 27: Smoking and health

1972 1976 1980 1984 1988 1992 19960

10

20

30

40

50

60

% p

reva

len

ceCIGARETTE SMOKING 1972-1998:

GB: General Household Survey

Men

Women

http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 28: Smoking and health

Disadvantage and Smoking

• A whole range of indicators of disadvantage predict who smokes

• Cigarette smoking prevalence tightly linked to deprivation, mainly because of low rates of quitting in disadvantaged groups

http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 29: Smoking and health

Indicators of socio-economic status

• Occupational class

• Educational level

• Housing tenure

• Car ownership

• Unemployment

• Living in crowded accommodation

• Single parenthood

• Divorced or separatedhttp://www.getwelluae.com

Page 30: Smoking and health

Disadvantage and smoking

• Poor people are:– More likely to take up smoking– Less likely to quit– More heavily exposed to other people’s

smoke – Become more nicotine dependent– Much more likely to die prematurely

from smokinghttp://www.getwelluae.com

Page 31: Smoking and health

0 1 2 3 4 50

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

% p

rev

ale

nc

e

CIGARETTE SMOKING BY DEPRIVATIONIN GREAT BRITAIN: GHS 1973 & 1998

1973

1998

DEPRIVATION SCOREMost affluent Poorest

http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 32: Smoking and health

0 1 2 3 4 50

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

% q

uit

SMOKING CESSATION BY DEPRIVATIONIN GREAT BRITAIN: GHS 1973 & 1998

1973

1998

DEPRIVATION SCOREMost affluent Poorest

http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 33: Smoking and health

0 1 2 3 4

200

250

300

350

Pla

sm

a c

oti

nin

e (

ng

/ml)

Plasma cotinine by deprivationin adult smokers: HSE 1993-1996

1993

1994

1996

DEPRIVATION SCOREhttp://www.getwelluae.com

Page 34: Smoking and health

Some implications of nicotine addiction for cessation and harm reduction

• Ineffective• cutting down• switching to cigars or a pipe• switching to low tar

• Effective

• Nicotine replacement productshttp://www.getwelluae.com

Page 35: Smoking and health

0 - .1 .1- .2- .4- .5- .6- .7- .8- .9- 1.0 +

Cigarette nicotine yield (mg)

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

1.2

1.4

1.6

Nic

oti

ne

in

tak

e p

er

cig

are

tte

(m

g)

Predicted and actual nicotine intakes per cigarettesmoked by nominal nicotine yield of usual brand

Predicted

Health Survey for England 1998

http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 36: Smoking and health

0 - .1 .1- .2- .4- .5- .6- .7- .8- .9- 1.0 +

Cigarette nicotine yield (mg)

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

1.2

1.4

1.6

Nic

oti

ne

in

tak

e p

er

cig

are

tte

(m

g)

Predicted and actual nicotine intakes per cigarettesmoked by nominal nicotine yield of usual brand

Actual Predicted

Health Survey for England 1998

http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 37: Smoking and health

One year success rates by intensity of intervention:

• Unaided quit attempt …………………...…..….1-2%

• Brief GP advice ……………………………...……5%

• Brief GP advice + NRT ……………………….…10%

• Intensive clinic support ………………………...15%

• Intensive clinic support + NRT……………..20-30%

http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 38: Smoking and health

1950 1975 2000 2025 2050

Year

0

100

200

300

400

500

Cu

mu

lati

ve d

eath

s fr

om

to

bac

co (

mil

lio

ns)

Scenarios for future deaths from tobacco

Trend

520

70

220

Source: Peto et al http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 39: Smoking and health

1950 1975 2000 2025 2050

Year

0

100

200

300

400

500

Cu

mu

lati

ve d

eath

s fr

om

to

bac

co (

mil

lio

ns)

Scenarios for future deaths from tobacco

If smokinguptake halves

by 2020

Trend

520

70

220

500

Source: Peto et al http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 40: Smoking and health

1950 1975 2000 2025 2050

Year

0

100

200

300

400

500

Cu

mu

lati

ve d

eath

s fr

om

to

bac

co (

mil

lio

ns)

Scenarios for future deaths from tobacco

If adult smokinghalves by 2020

If smokinguptake halves

by 2020

Trend

520

70

220

190

500

340

Source: Peto et al http://www.getwelluae.com

Page 41: Smoking and health

Conclusions

• Nicotine’s legal status and lack of adverse effects on performance have hampered recognition of its status as a drug of dependence

• Nicotine is pharmacologically a hard drug, on a par with heroin and cocaine

• Cigarette smoking is by far the biggest problem of drug dependence

http://www.getwelluae.com