Abstract

Introduction: Smoking among young adults is associated with atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) in middle age. Our aim was to analyze the trajectory of smoking in young adults and analyze the effects of the trajectory group on incident ASCVD. Methods: This study was conducted among 60,709 young adult men aged 20–29 years who received health screening every two years from 1992–2004. Trajectory analysis was performed through smoking survey data measured 7 times during this period. ASCVD, including ischemic heart disease (IHD) and stroke events were confirmed from 2005–2015. The association between the trajectory group and ASCVD risk was analyzed using Cox proportional hazard models, controlling for covariates and mediators. Results: Trajectory analysis showed that smoking categorized into five groups as follows: Group 1 (28.3%), low steady; Group 2 (14.7%), lowering; Group 3 (17.3%), high steady; Group 4 (15.6%), rise and fall; and Group 5 (24.2%), very high steady. The model performance of the trajectory model (Akaike information criterion; AIC = 51,670.78) with mediators was better than the model (AIC = 51,847.85) without mediators. Group 5 showed a 49% higher risk of ASCVD than Group 1. The risk of IHD was 1.63-times higher for Group 5 and 1.31-times higher for Group 4, compared to Group 1. Compared to Group 1, Group 5 had a 1.36- and 1.58-times higher risk for total stroke and ischemic stroke, respectively. Conclusions: In young adult men, the multiple measured trajectory model with mediators was far more informative than one-time smoking for explaining the association with cardiovascular disease.

Highlights

  • Smoking among young adults is associated with atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) in middle age

  • We established a prospective cohort for participants who were young adults aged 20–29-years-old in the KMIC and named this study as the Korean Life Course Health Study (KLCHS)

  • This study showed the trajectory of cigarette smoking and association with the risk of ASCVD, measured 7 times every two years between 1992 and 2004 in young adults

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Summary

Introduction

Smoking among young adults is associated with atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) in middle age. The association between the trajectory group and ASCVD risk was analyzed using Cox proportional hazard models, controlling for covariates and mediators. For the last 30 years in Korea, there has been a nearly 40% decrease in smoking. In this context, information gained from smoking prevalence measured at one time point is very limited. Information gained from smoking prevalence measured at one time point is very limited Possible applications of these measurements, would be a time varying exposure or a trajectory analysis of smoking [4,5,6].

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