Cigarette Smoking and Dementia
Author(s) -
Miguel A. Hernán,
Álvaro Alonso,
Giancarlo Logroscino
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
epidemiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1531-5487
pISSN - 1044-3983
DOI - 10.1097/ede.0b013e31816bbe14
Subject(s) - dementia , censoring (clinical trials) , medicine , relative risk , disease , demography , incidence (geometry) , epidemiology , gerontology , confidence interval , pathology , mathematics , geometry , sociology
We conducted a systematic review of published prospective studies that estimated the association between smoking and the incidence of Alzheimer disease and dementia. The relative rate for smokers versus nonsmokers ranged from 0.27 to 2.72 for Alzheimer disease (12 studies) and from 0.38 to 1.42 for dementia (6 studies). The minimum age at entry (range: 55-75 years) explained much of the between-study heterogeneity in relative rates. We conjecture that selection bias due to censoring by death may be the main explanation for the reversal of the relative rate with increasing age.
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