Cigarette Smoking and Subclinical Peripheral Arterial Disease in Blacks of the Jackson Heart Study

2019 
Background Prevalence of peripheral artery disease (PAD) is significantly higher among blacks as compared with non‐Hispanic whites, but the role of cigarette smoking in PAD is understudied in blacks. We aimed to evaluate the relationship between cigarette smoking and PAD in blacks in the (JHS) Jackson Heart Study. Methods and Results JHS participants (n=5306) were classified by self‐reported baseline smoking status into current, past (smoked at least 400 cigarettes/life), or never smokers. We examined multivariable logistic and robust linear regression models to estimate the associations between baseline smoking status, smoking intensity, and measures of subclinical PAD (ankle‐brachial index [visit 1] and aortic calcium by computed tomography [visit 2]) to yield odds ratios and β‐coefficients (estimated adjusted difference) to compare each smoking status with never smokers (reference group). There were 3579 (68%) never smokers, 986 (19%) past smokers, and 693 (13%) current smokers self‐identified at basel...
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