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. 1993 May;7(5):705-10.
doi: 10.1097/00002030-199305000-00015.

The effect of cigarette smoking on the development of AIDS in HIV-1-seropositive individuals

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The effect of cigarette smoking on the development of AIDS in HIV-1-seropositive individuals

R B Nieman et al. AIDS. 1993 May.

Abstract

Objective: To determine whether HIV-1-seropositive cigarette smokers progress more rapidly to AIDS than HIV-1-seropositive non-smokers.

Setting: The genitourinary medicine outpatient department of St Mary's Hospital, London, which is a London University teaching hospital (tertiary care centre).

Subjects and design: Case series of 84 individuals with AIDS who provided accurate details of their smoking habits before their AIDS-defining diagnosis.

Main outcome measure: Progression time to AIDS in relation to smoking habit.

Results: Progression time to AIDS (all diagnoses) was significantly reduced in HIV-1-seropositive smokers: median time to AIDS was 8.17 months for smokers (n = 43) and 14.50 months for non-smokers (n = 41) (P = 0.003). Smokers developed Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) more rapidly than non-smokers, with a median time to PCP of 9.0 months, compared with 16.0 months for non-smokers (P = 0.002). Smoking had no significant effect on progression time to AIDS when not due to PCP.

Conclusion: Cigarette smoking by HIV-1-seropositive individuals is associated with a more rapid development of AIDS and should be discouraged.

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