FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
December 16, 2003
PASSIVE TOBACCO SMOKE INCREASES COMPLICATIONS
IN CHILDREN WITH SICKLE CELL DISEASE
(SACRAMENTO, Calif.) — Physicians and researchers at
the UC Davis School of Medicine
and Medical
Center found that children with sickle cell disease who are exposed to tobacco
smoke in the home have more complications from the disease than those who live
in a smoke-free environment. The study was published in the December issue of
the Archives of Pediatrics
and Adolescent Medicine.
“Exposure to environmental or passive tobacco smoke increased the risk
of sickle cell crisis by 90 percent, and was not influenced by other factors
known to increase complications, such as age of the patient or type of sickle
cell disease,” said Daniel C. West, associate professor of pediatrics
at UC Davis and lead author of the study. “Exposure to tobacco smoke has
a tremendous impact on children with sickle cell disease. In fact, the study
suggests that removing passive tobacco smoke from the home might not only reduce
the suffering of children with sickle cell disease, but also reduce the cost
of medical care.”
Sickle cell disease is a hereditary disease that affects hemoglobin, the protein
in red blood cells that carries and delivers oxygen to tissues. The presence
of sickle hemoglobin can lead to damaged and misshapen red blood cells that
do not flow normally through blood vessels and deliver less than the normal
amount of oxygen to peripheral tissues. These abnormalities can cause episodes
of severe pain, known as sickle cell crises, and life-threatening damage to
vital organs, such as the lungs and the brain.
Over a period of two years, researchers monitored 52 patients between the ages
of 2 and 18 with several types of sickle cell disease.
Each patient or family completed an environmental survey and researchers recorded
the number of sickle cell crises — vaso-occlusive pain episodes, acute
chest syndrome, stroke — that required hospitalization.
The 22 children and adolescents who were exposed to environmental tobacco smoke
experienced more than twice the number of sickle cell crises requiring hospitalization
compared to those not exposed to tobacco smoke in the home.
As a secondary outcome, researchers found that the cost of hospitalization in
the exposed group was more than triple the cost of hospitalization in the unexposed
group.
West said, “If we can reduce smoking in family members, we may be able
to significantly reduce the life-threatening complications of sickle cell disease
in their children.”
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