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The impact of smoking cessation on multiple sclerosis disease progression

The impact of smoking cessation on multiple sclerosis disease progression
The impact of smoking cessation on multiple sclerosis disease progression
The negative impact of smoking in MS is well established, however, there is much less evidence as to whether smoking cessation is beneficial to progression in MS. Adults with MS registered on the United Kingdom MS Register (2011-2020) formed this retrospective and prospective cohort study. Primary outcomes were changes in 3 patient reported outcomes (PROs): normalised MS Physical Impact Scale (MSIS-29-Phys), normalised MS Walking Scale (MSWS-12) and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS-Anxiety and HADS-Depression). Time to event outcomes were clinically significant increases in the PROs. 7983 participants were included, 4130 (51.7%) of these had ever smoked; of whom 1315 (16.5%) were current smokers and 2815/4130 (68.2%) were former smokers. For all PROs, current smokers at the time of completing their first questionnaire had higher PRO scores indicating higher disability compared to those who had never smoked (∼10 points difference in MSIS-29-Phys and MSWS-12; 1.5-1.8 point for HADS-anxiety and HADS-depression). There was no improvement in PRO scores with increasing time since quitting in former smokers. 923 participants formed the prospective parallel group, which demonstrated that MSIS-29-phy 5.03, [3.71, 6.34], MSWS-12 5.28, [3.62, 6.94] and HADS-depression 0.71, [0.47, 0.96] worsened over a period of 4 years, whereas HADS-anxiety remained stable. Smoking status was significant at year 4; current smokers had higher MSIS-29-Phys and HADS-Anxiety scores (3.05 [0.22, 5.88], 1.14 [0.52,1.76]) while former smokers had a lower MSIS-29 score of -2.91[-5.03, -0.79]. 4642 participants comprised the time to event analysis. Still smoking was associated with a shorter time to worsening event in all PROs (MSIS-29-Phys: n = 4436, p = 0.0013; MSWS-12: n = 3902, p = 0.0061; HADS-anxiety: n = 4511, p = 0.0017; HADS-depression: n = 4511, p < 0.0001). Worsening in motor disability (MSIS-29-Phys and MSWS-12) was independent of baseline HADS-anxiety and HADS-depression scores. There was no statistically significant difference in the rate of worsening between never and former smokers. When smokers quit, there is a slowing in the rate of motor disability deterioration so that it matches the rate of motor decline in those who have never smoked. This suggests that smoking cessation is beneficial for people with MS.
0006-8950
Rodgers, Jeff
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Friede, Tim
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Vonberg, Frederick W.
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Constantinescu, Cris S.
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Coles, Alasdair
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Chataway, Jeremy
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Duddy, Martin
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Emsley, Hedley
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Ford, Helen
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Fisniku, Lennora
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Galea, Ian
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Harrower, Timothy
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McDonnell, Gavin V.
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McLean, Brendan
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Pearson, Owen R.
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Rog, David
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Sharrack, Basil
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Wilson, Heather C.
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Chataway, Jeremy
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Duddy, Martin
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Emsley, Hedley
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Ford, Helen
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Galea, Ian
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Harrower, Timothy
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Hobart, Jeremy
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Marta, Monica
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McDonnell, Gavin V.
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McLean, Brendan
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Pearson, Owen R.
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Schmierer, Klaus
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Straukiene, Agne
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Wilson, Heather C.
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Ford, David V.
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Middleton, Rod M.
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Nicholas, Richard
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Rodgers, Jeff, Friede, Tim, Vonberg, Frederick W., Constantinescu, Cris S., Coles, Alasdair, Chataway, Jeremy, Duddy, Martin, Emsley, Hedley, Ford, Helen, Fisniku, Lennora, Galea, Ian, Harrower, Timothy, Hobart, Jeremy, Huseyin, Huseyin, Kipps, Christopher M., Marta, Monica, McDonnell, Gavin V., McLean, Brendan, Pearson, Owen R., Rog, David, Schmierer, Klaus, Sharrack, Basil, Straukiene, Agne, Wilson, Heather C., Ford, David V., Middleton, Rod M. and Nicholas, Richard (2021) The impact of smoking cessation on multiple sclerosis disease progression. Brain. (doi:10.1093/brain/awab385).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The negative impact of smoking in MS is well established, however, there is much less evidence as to whether smoking cessation is beneficial to progression in MS. Adults with MS registered on the United Kingdom MS Register (2011-2020) formed this retrospective and prospective cohort study. Primary outcomes were changes in 3 patient reported outcomes (PROs): normalised MS Physical Impact Scale (MSIS-29-Phys), normalised MS Walking Scale (MSWS-12) and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS-Anxiety and HADS-Depression). Time to event outcomes were clinically significant increases in the PROs. 7983 participants were included, 4130 (51.7%) of these had ever smoked; of whom 1315 (16.5%) were current smokers and 2815/4130 (68.2%) were former smokers. For all PROs, current smokers at the time of completing their first questionnaire had higher PRO scores indicating higher disability compared to those who had never smoked (∼10 points difference in MSIS-29-Phys and MSWS-12; 1.5-1.8 point for HADS-anxiety and HADS-depression). There was no improvement in PRO scores with increasing time since quitting in former smokers. 923 participants formed the prospective parallel group, which demonstrated that MSIS-29-phy 5.03, [3.71, 6.34], MSWS-12 5.28, [3.62, 6.94] and HADS-depression 0.71, [0.47, 0.96] worsened over a period of 4 years, whereas HADS-anxiety remained stable. Smoking status was significant at year 4; current smokers had higher MSIS-29-Phys and HADS-Anxiety scores (3.05 [0.22, 5.88], 1.14 [0.52,1.76]) while former smokers had a lower MSIS-29 score of -2.91[-5.03, -0.79]. 4642 participants comprised the time to event analysis. Still smoking was associated with a shorter time to worsening event in all PROs (MSIS-29-Phys: n = 4436, p = 0.0013; MSWS-12: n = 3902, p = 0.0061; HADS-anxiety: n = 4511, p = 0.0017; HADS-depression: n = 4511, p < 0.0001). Worsening in motor disability (MSIS-29-Phys and MSWS-12) was independent of baseline HADS-anxiety and HADS-depression scores. There was no statistically significant difference in the rate of worsening between never and former smokers. When smokers quit, there is a slowing in the rate of motor disability deterioration so that it matches the rate of motor decline in those who have never smoked. This suggests that smoking cessation is beneficial for people with MS.

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Rodgers et al_accepted manuscript - Accepted Manuscript
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awab385 - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 28 September 2021
Published date: 8 October 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 452597
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/452597
ISSN: 0006-8950
PURE UUID: 576a7cdd-1165-45ef-9f6b-1b0c1a067f7e
ORCID for Ian Galea: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1268-5102

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Date deposited: 11 Dec 2021 11:28
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:57

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Contributors

Author: Jeff Rodgers
Author: Tim Friede
Author: Frederick W. Vonberg
Author: Cris S. Constantinescu
Author: Alasdair Coles
Author: Jeremy Chataway
Author: Martin Duddy
Author: Hedley Emsley
Author: Helen Ford
Author: Lennora Fisniku
Author: Ian Galea ORCID iD
Author: Timothy Harrower
Author: Jeremy Hobart
Author: Huseyin Huseyin
Author: Christopher M. Kipps
Author: Monica Marta
Author: Gavin V. McDonnell
Author: Brendan McLean
Author: Owen R. Pearson
Author: David Rog
Author: Klaus Schmierer
Author: Basil Sharrack
Author: Agne Straukiene
Author: Heather C. Wilson
Author: David V. Ford
Author: Rod M. Middleton
Author: Richard Nicholas

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