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Clinical Trial
. 1991 Sep;20(5):621-37.
doi: 10.1016/0091-7435(91)90059-d.

Pulmonary function in relation to cigarette smoking and smoking cessation. MRFIT Research Group

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Pulmonary function in relation to cigarette smoking and smoking cessation. MRFIT Research Group

M C Townsend et al. Prev Med. 1991 Sep.

Abstract

Background: More than half of the subjects in the MRFIT smoked at baseline and 10% of the subjects stopped smoking permanently during the first year of the trial. In this report, rates of decline in forced expiratory volume in 1 sec (FEV1) are compared for early permanent quitters and smokers who continued to smoke throughout the trial.

Methods: Since pulmonary function testing was not standardized across all centers until the third annual visit cycle, change in FEV1 is examined over the latter half of the trial; the level of FEV1 is analyzed cross-sectionally at the midpoint of the trial. Analyses are limited to 4,926 subjects who never used beta-blockers or smoked cigars, cigarillos, or pipes during the trial and who had annual FEV1s measured over 2-4 years in the latter half of the trial.

Results: Quitters during the first 12 months experienced smaller declines in FEV1 over the latter half of the trial than continuing smokers, with -50.7 ml/year versus -59.0 ml/year, respectively, adjusted for the level of FEV1 (P = 0.05). Cross-sectionally, those who had never smoked, former smokers, quitters, and continuing smokers showed a gradient of decreasing FEV1, and all four smoking groups were significantly different from each other (P less than 0.05).

Conclusions: These data suggest that if a middle-aged, healthy smoker stopped smoking permanently, he could expect his FEV1 to deteriorate at a more gradual rate 3-4 years after stopping smoking than a similar smoker who continued to smoke. No information was available for the complete MRFIT cohort on the pulmonary function effects immediately following smoking cessation.

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