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Lung function, smoking and mortality in a 26-year follow-up of healthy middle-aged males

K. Stavem, E. Aaser, L. Sandvik, J. V. Bjørnholt, G. Erikssen, E. Thaulow, J. Erikssen
European Respiratory Journal 2005 25: 618-625; DOI: 10.1183/09031936.05.00008504
K. Stavem
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E. Aaser
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L. Sandvik
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J. V. Bjørnholt
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G. Erikssen
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E. Thaulow
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J. Erikssen
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Abstract

Lung function has been associated with mortality after adjusting for other risk factors; however, few studies have adjusted for physical fitness and reported separate analyses according to smoking status.

In 1972–1975, spirometry, clinical and physiological parameters were recorded in 1,623 apparently healthy males aged 40–59 yrs. After 26 yrs of follow-up, the current authors investigated the association between baseline lung function and mortality, adjusting for smoking, physical fitness and other potential factors.

By 2000, 615 individuals (38%) had died, with 308 (50%) of these deaths from cardiovascular (CV) causes. Forced expiratory volume in one second was a predictor of all-cause mortality (risk ratio (RR) 1.10 per reduction of 10%) after adjusting for smoking, physical fitness, age, systolic blood pressure, body mass index and serum cholesterol. The corresponding multivariate RR was 1.07 for CV causes and 1.34 for respiratory death.

In conclusion, in stratified analyses among current and former smokers, forced expiratory volume in one second % predicted was a strong independent predictor of all-cause mortality and respiratory death among current smokers. Forced expiratory volume in one second % predicted was not associated with mortality among never-smokers.

  • Cohort study
  • lung function
  • mortality
  • physical fitness
  • smoking status

Prospective population studies have reported pulmonary function to be an independent predictor of all-cause and cardiovascular (CV) mortality when adjusting for a variety of confounders or known risk factors 1–11. Poor lung function, measured as forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1), is also associated with increased mortality from respiratory diseases 1, 3, 4, 6, 8, 12, 13 and malignancies 2, 14–16. The mechanism for the relationship between lung function and CV mortality remains largely unexplained. Various mechanisms for the association between lung function and CV mortality have been suggested, such as through systemic inflammation, autonomic dysfunction, physical inactivity, socio-economic status, residual confounding, or that lung function is an indicator of general health status or unmeasurable environmental or lifestyle influences 13, 17–21.

The impact of lung function on mortality 22, 23 and coronary heart disease 24 after adjustment for self-reported physical activity has been reported, although no studies of mortality have adjusted for objective measures of physical fitness. Few studies also have reported the association between lung function and mortality separately for smoking groups 21.

In this study, the current authors aimed to assess the predictive value of pulmonary function for all-cause, CV and respiratory mortality after adjusting for a number of risk factors, including smoking status and physical fitness. In addition, the present authors intended to assess the association separately in groups with different smoking habits. This study presents data from a population of healthy middle-aged males with follow-up over 26 yrs.

METHODS

Study subjects

In 1972, all healthy males aged 40–59 yrs from five companies in Oslo, Norway, were invited to a CV screening survey (n = 2,341), and 2,014 (86%) consented to participate. The companies included Siemens AS, and four from the public sector (Norwegian Postal Services, Norwegian Telecom, Norwegian Customs and Excise, and Norwegian State Railways). The participants had to be free from known or suspected heart disease, drug-treated hypertension, diabetes mellitus, malignancy, advanced pulmonary, renal and liver diseases, and locomotor activity limitation 25.

Examination and measurements

Between August 1972 and March 1975, the participants underwent an examination programme that included a detailed case history, chest radiograph, measurement of resting heart rate and blood pressure, spirometry, a symptom-limited exercise ECG test, and fasting blood tests 25.

Forced vital capacity (FVC) and FEV1 were measured with a calibrated Bernstein spirometer, using a standardised procedure 25. After one trial test, FVC and FEV1 values were recorded from two successive maximum expiratory manoeuvres 26, corrected to body temperature and ambient pressure and saturated with water vapour, based on daily room temperature measurements and an assumption of atmospheric pressure of 760 mmHg. Originally, only the mean FEV1 and FVC values were recorded. In order to obtain the maximum of the two tests, in 2001, the original spirograms were retrieved and values for both manoeuvres were recorded. Among 1,999 patients with original spirometry recordings, 75 of the records (72 consecutively numbered) had disappeared in storage. Thus, 1,924 spirograms were available for review. In a further analysis, patients with ≤0.3 L difference between the two FVC tests (n = 1,623) were included 27, 28. Reference values for maximum values were derived in the total sample using multiple linear regression (n = 1,623), as follows:FormulaFormulaThe symptom-limited exercise test was performed on a calibrated electrically braked bicycle (Elema-Schönander AB, Solna, Sweden). The initial workload was 100 W (600 kpm·min−1) with increments of 50 W (300 kpm) every 6 min, continued until exhaustion unless stopped earlier for safety reasons 25. Physical fitness was defined as total work divided by body weight (in kJ·kg−1).

Identification of deaths

Mortality data up to December 31, 1999 were obtained from Statistics Norway (Oslo, Norway), coded according to the Eighth and Ninth Revision of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-8 and ICD-9) 29, 30. CV mortality consists of (ICD-9 codes in parentheses): ischaemic heart disease (410–414), cerebrovascular disease (430–438), other CV disease (401–404, 420–429, 440–448) and sudden death (798.1). Sudden death was defined as unexpected or unwitnessed death within 24 h of being seen alive and well, or, if witnessed, within 1 h of symptom onset. Respiratory mortality consisted of lung cancer (162), pneumonia (480–487), obstructive lung disease (490–496) and other respiratory diseases (137, 163). Migration was minimal in this cohort; only two individuals were not available in the registry of Statistics Norway at the end of 1999. All death certificates were reviewed by at least two of the investigators.

Statistical analysis

The sample was subdivided into FEV1 % pred quartiles (Q1–Q4) in order to study the differences in CV and all-cause mortality that are related to lung function. Baseline values were compared using the test for trend or Chi-squared test. Mortality curves according to FEV1 % pred quartile were created plotting separate Cox proportional hazards models, adjusted to age 50 yrs. Cox's proportional hazards regression models were used to assess the association of FEV1 % pred with mortality after adjustment for established risk factors for CV death (age, serum cholesterol, systolic blood pressure) and potential confounders (smoking habits, physical fitness, body mass index (BMI)).

Four Cox models were created for the total sample and separate models for never-smokers, previous smokers and current smokers, based on baseline smoking status. The results are presented as relative risks (RR) with 95% confidence intervals. For FEV1 % pred, the effect of 10% reduction was modelled. Physical fitness was used as a continuous variable 31–33, modelling the effect of a change of 0.55 kJ·kg−1 (1 sd). BMI was modelled as a continuous variable that, in the studied population, contributed to better fitting models than categories based on quartiles.

Smoking status was categorised as never-smokers, former smokers, 1–10 cigarettes per day, and >10 cigarettes per day. Smoking status from a follow-up study after ∼8 yrs was available for 1,423 of the 1,623 individuals (88%) with acceptable spirometry. The exact dates of the events were used for censoring in the models. In the Cox models, smoking status was included as a time-dependent covariate, assuming that changes in smoking status appeared at the midpoint of time between the two assessments. For subjects without follow-up smoking status, unchanged smoking status was assumed.

In stratified analysis according to baseline smoking status, the two classes of smokers were aggregated into current smokers. For current smokers, pack-yrs were calculated using reported smoking volume at the study start as the average volume for the period (midpoint of the intervals 1–5, 6–10, 11–15, 16–20 and 21–25 cigarettes·day−1, and 28 cigarettes·day−1 for those reporting >25 cigarettes·day−1). In the analysis of respiratory mortality, there were too few events among never-smokers (nine deaths) and former smokers (16 deaths) to justify separate analyses for these groups.

The proportional hazards assumption was checked using plots of the hazard function, log–log of the hazard function, and a test for proportional hazard 34. A 5% significance level was chosen, using two-tailed tests.

RESULTS

Acceptable spirometric recordings, according to the current authors' criteria, were available in 1,623 of the 2,014 apparently healthy males (84% of the 1,924 spirograms reviewed). The sample mean±sd age was 49.8±5.5 yrs, and the mean unadjusted FEV1 was 3.50±0.75 L. Table 1⇓ presents patient characteristics according to the quartiles of FEV1 % pred (Q1 with the lowest, and Q4 with the highest values for FEV1 % pred). There was an association between FEV1 % pred with other spirometric indices, physical fitness and smoking history, but no difference in age or systolic blood pressure between patients classified according to quartile of FEV1 % pred.

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Table. 1—

Baseline subject characteristics according to quartile of relative forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1)

At the follow-up examination after, on average, 8 yrs (n = 1,423, 88% of the cohort), 6% of never-smokers had started smoking (21 out of 356), 10% of ex-smokers had started smoking again (47 out of 484), and 32% of the baseline smokers reported that they had quit smoking (185 out of 583).

After an average 26 yrs of follow-up (range 25–27 yrs), a total of 42,262 man-yrs, 615 (38%) men had died, of whom 308 (50%) had died from CV diseases. In the total sample, the correlation between FEV1 % pred and the physical fitness measure was 0.23 (p<0.001; Pearson's correlation), and was -0.21 between FEV1 % pred and smoking history (p<0.001; Spearman's rank correlation). Age-adjusted mortality from all causes and respiratory causes was higher in the lowest quartile of FEV1 % pred (Q1) compared with the other quartiles. For all-cause mortality in the total sample, there was a decreasing trend in mortality from the lowest to the highest quartile (table 2⇓).

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Table. 2—

Age-adjusted cardiovascular, respiratory and all-cause mortality rates in 1,623 males over 26 yrs according to baseline smoking status and quartile of relative forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1)

In never-smokers, there was little association between FEV1 % pred both for CV and all-cause mortality (table 2⇑). Among former smokers, the mortality was higher for CV, respiratory and all causes in Q1 of FEV1 % pred compared with the other three quartiles (table 2⇑). Smokers presented with a less clear association between the quartile of FEV1 % pred and mortality. Current smokers had higher mortality rates than current nonsmokers for CV, respiratory and all-cause mortality (table 2⇑).

Age-adjusted cumulative mortality from all causes was highest in the first quartile of relative FEV1, with a decreasing trend in mortality from the lowest to the highest quartile (fig. 1⇓). There was an increased mortality from lung cancer and obstructive lung diseases among those in the lowest quartile of FEV1 % pred (table 3⇓), but little difference in ischaemic heart disease or cerebrovascular disease between the groups.

Fig. 1—
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Fig. 1—

Cumulative age-adjusted mortality according to quartile of relative forced expiratory volume in one second among 1,623 males over 26 yrs. Quartile 1 (lowest): – ·· –; quartile 2: ----; quartile 3: ––––; quartile 4: ········.

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Table. 3—

Cause of death during the 26-yr study period according to the forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1) % predicted quartile

In the total sample, Cox regression analysis showed that, after adjusting for age, smoking habits, systolic blood pressure, cholesterol, physical fitness and BMI, the RR of all-cause mortality was 1.10 (p<0.001) for a decrease in FEV1 % pred of 10% (table 4⇓). The increased mortality risk of a decrease in FEV1 % pred of 10% was similar for CV mortality (RR 1.10; p = 0.04) and slightly higher for respiratory mortality (RR 1.34; p<0.001) after adjusting for the same variables.

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Table. 4—

Relative risk (RR) of death# for a reduction in relative forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1) of 10%

Both CV and all-cause mortality increased with smoking, although ex-smokers had a statistically nonsignificantly lower all-cause and cardiovascular mortality than never-smokers. BMI increase was associated with increased CV mortality (table 4⇑).

In the stratified analysis of current smokers, a reduction in FEV1 % pred of 10% was associated with an 8% increase in all-cause mortality (RR 1.08; p = 0.007) after adjusting for age, smoking habits (pack-yrs), systolic blood pressure, BMI, serum cholesterol and physical fitness (table 5⇓). There was little association of FEV1 % pred with CV mortality. Among current smokers, smoking intensity in pack-yrs was only associated with all-cause mortality, but not with CV mortality (table 5⇓). In former smokers, FEV1 % pred was associated with all-cause mortality (RR 1.18; p<0.001) and CV mortality (RR 1.17; p = 0.01) in multivariate analysis (table 5⇓). In never-smokers, FEV1 % pred was associated with all-cause mortality, but not with CV death, after adjusting for other potential predictors (table 5⇓).

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Table. 5—

Relative risk of death# for a reduction in relative forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1), stratified after baseline smoking status¶

DISCUSSION

Among apparently healthy middle-aged males, lung function, measured as FEV1 % pred, predicted all-cause and CV mortality during 26 yrs of follow-up, although more so for all-cause mortality than CV mortality. Low FEV1 % pred predicted independently of age, smoking status, an objective measure of physical fitness, systolic blood pressure, serum cholesterol and BMI.

Subgroup analysis indicated an association between low FEV1 % pred and increased all-cause mortality among both current smokers and previous smokers, but not among nonsmokers. Additionally, low FEV1 % pred was associated with increased death from respiratory causes among current smokers and with CV death among previous smokers.

These findings are in agreement with previous reports 1–9, 13 and demonstrate increased mortality with decreasing lung function. The association of lung function with CV mortality has been less consistent than all-cause mortality, as has also been observed in several other studies 2, 9, 11, 35. In the present study, an increase in RR of 1.10 for a decrease of 10% in FEV1 % pred was also found, as in the Busselton, Copenhagen and National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES)1 Epidemiological Follow-up Study (NHEFS) studies 4, 21, 36, 37, despite the fact that the current authors had adjusted for additional variables, including physical fitness. A notable finding in the current study was that there was little association between FEV1 % pred and mortality among never-smokers, also noted in some studies of CV mortality and morbidity 21, 38, but not in all studies 4, 24, 36.

Some of the differences in reported results between studies might be caused by differences in endpoints or methods to adjust for age, height or smoking, or the interaction of smoking with other risk factors 24. There is no consensus on how to model different aspects of smoking history, including definitions of current and ex-smokers, and how to accommodate the duration and intensity of smoking in statistical models 39. Moreover, it is difficult to separate the effects of age at initiation, duration of smoking, and time since cessation among ex-smokers because of problems with multicollinearity 39.

Attention has been paid to the association of FEV1 with mortality, because this lung function parameter is more reproducible and less effort dependent than, for example, FVC and peak expiratory flow 40, and, moreover, it is considered to be the lung function variable that best predicts mortality 41. Most previous studies of the association between lung function and mortality have used FEV1 % pred as the measure of lung function 13, 21, 41, 42, although some studies have reported similar associations of FVC with CV mortality, for instance in the Framingham study 5, or assessed the association of peak expiratory flow with mortality 22, 23.

Relative FEV1 and rate of change in relative FEV1 are associated with reduced self-reported physical activity in the general population 18, 20. Self-reported physical activity has also been included as a covariate in longitudinal studies of the association between FEV1 and mortality 22, 23. However, previous reports of the capacity of relative FEV1 to predict all-cause or CV mortality have not adjusted for objective measures of physical fitness, such as those used in this study. In males <65 yrs of age, an objective measure of cardiorespiratory fitness was a stronger predictor of coronary events than leisure time physical activity 43. This negative impact of physical fitness on mortality is well known 31–33. In the present study, the association of physical fitness with all-cause mortality was more pronounced among current smokers than among former smokers.

The pathogenesis for the association between lung function impairment and increased CV mortality is unknown, although many explanations have been proposed. A low FEV1 % pred may be a marker of physiological abnormalities that predispose for mortality, and might influence case fatality in various situations. There is a complex interplay between some of the risk factors for CV mortality, such as BMI, smoking, serum cholesterol and blood pressure. It is well known that hypertension is more common in obese than in lean persons, that smokers on average have a lower BMI than nonsmokers, and that smoking cessation is frequently followed by weight increase 44. Hence, smoking contributes to CV mortality, but counteracts another CV risk factor, obesity 45. Some of the risk factors are modifiable through interventions, such as physical fitness, smoking and serum cholesterol. Lung function is not modifiable by training or interventions; however, smoking cessation 46 can influence the rate of decline and, hence, lead to a reduction in mortality 47. Findings of higher levels of inflammatory markers among persons with lower lung functions indicate that another possible mechanism for increased coronary heart disease could be through a systemic inflammatory response 17, 24.

Some limitations of the current study must be mentioned. The sample was an occupational cohort, which might experience favourable survival rates compared with a general population sample because of a possible healthy-worker effect. This could limit the generalisability of the current findings. The cohort consisted only of males. No information about the socio-economic status of the individuals in the studied sample was available, which is associated with lung function and mortality 19, 48, 49.

The current authors' data show that smoking habits changed considerably during the first 8 yrs of follow-up. The analyses were adjusted for smoking history after 8 yrs and separate models were created according to baseline smoking status. A relationship between lung function, smoking and mortality might also be nonlinear.

The finding of no association of lung function with all-cause and CV mortality in never-smokers is interesting and lends support to possible residual confounding; however, the sample of never-smokers was too small to fully evaluate this. Reduced lung function might reflect unrecognised cardiac failure, although, with the current authors' inclusion criteria, unrecognised latent heart failure ought to be rare. Moreover, there are clinical, electrocardiographical and radiological follow-up data that do not support that latent heart failure could explain even part of these findings (data not shown). A positive exercise test (ST depression >0.1 mV on the exercise ECG) was found in 5% of the subjects, but this finding was also unrelated to low FEV1 % pred. Hence, it is unlikely that latent heart failure or coronary ischaemia at rest was related to low FEV1 % pred.

In conclusion, in the present 26-yr prospective follow-up study, it has been shown that forced expiratory volume in one second % predicted was an independent predictor of all-cause, respiratory and cardiovascular mortality after adjusting for smoking history, physical fitness and well-established risk factors. However, there was little association of forced expiratory volume in one second % predicted with cardiovascular and all-cause mortality among nonsmokers.

Footnotes

  • For editorial comments see page 587.

  • Received January 21, 2004.
  • Accepted December 22, 2004.
  • © ERS Journals Ltd

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Lung function, smoking and mortality in a 26-year follow-up of healthy middle-aged males
K. Stavem, E. Aaser, L. Sandvik, J. V. Bjørnholt, G. Erikssen, E. Thaulow, J. Erikssen
European Respiratory Journal Apr 2005, 25 (4) 618-625; DOI: 10.1183/09031936.05.00008504

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Lung function, smoking and mortality in a 26-year follow-up of healthy middle-aged males
K. Stavem, E. Aaser, L. Sandvik, J. V. Bjørnholt, G. Erikssen, E. Thaulow, J. Erikssen
European Respiratory Journal Apr 2005, 25 (4) 618-625; DOI: 10.1183/09031936.05.00008504
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