Abstract

BackgroundSecondhand smoke exposure, an important environmental health factor in cystic fibrosis (CF), remains uniquely challenging to children with CF as they strive to maintain pulmonary function during early stages of growth and throughout adolescence. Despite various epidemiologic studies among CF populations, little has been done to coalesce estimates of the association between secondhand smoke exposure and lung function decline. MethodsA systematic review was performed using PRISMA guidelines. A Bayesian random-effects model was employed to estimate the association between secondhand smoke exposure and change in lung function (measured as FEV1% predicted). ResultsQuantitative synthesis of study estimates indicated that second-hand smoke exposure corresponded to a significant drop in FEV1 (estimated decrease: -5.11% predicted; 95% CI: -7.20, -3.47). The estimate of between-study heterogeneity was 1.32% predicted (95% CI: 0.05, 4.26). There was moderate heterogeneity between the 6 analyzed studies that met review criteria (degree of heterogeneity: I2=61.9% [95% CI: 7.3–84.4%] and p = 0.022 from the frequentist method.) ConclusionsOur results quantify the impact at the pediatric population level and corroborate the assertion that secondhand smoke exposure negatively affects pulmonary function in children with CF. Findings highlight challenges and opportunities for future environmental health interventions in pediatric CF care.

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