TY - JOUR T1 - Smoking Is Associated with Higher Disease Activity in Rheumatoid Arthritis: A Longitudinal Study Controlling for Time-varying Covariates JF - The Journal of Rheumatology JO - J Rheumatol SP - 370 LP - 375 DO - 10.3899/jrheum.180262 VL - 46 IS - 4 AU - Milena A. Gianfrancesco AU - Laura Trupin AU - Stephen Shiboski AU - Mark van der Laan AU - Jonathan Graf AU - John Imboden AU - Jinoos Yazdany AU - Gabriela Schmajuk Y1 - 2019/04/01 UR - http://www.jrheum.org/content/46/4/370.abstract N2 - Objective. Prior studies around the relationship between smoking and rheumatoid arthritis (RA) disease activity have reported inconsistent findings, which may be ascribed to heterogeneous study designs or biases in statistical analyses. We examined the association between smoking and RA outcomes using statistical methods that account for time-varying confounding and loss to followup.Methods. We included 282 individuals with an RA diagnosis using electronic health record data collected at a public hospital between 2013 and 2017. Current smoking status and disease activity were assessed at each visit; covariates included sex, race/ethnicity, age, obesity, and medication use. We used longitudinal targeted maximum likelihood estimation to estimate the causal effect of smoking on disease activity measures at 27 months, and compared results to conventional longitudinal methods.Results. Smoking was associated with an increase of 0.64 units in the patient global score compared to nonsmoking (p = 0.01), and with 2.58 more swollen joints (p < 0.001). While smoking was associated with a higher clinical disease activity score (2.11), the difference was not statistically significant (p = 0.22). We found no association between smoking and physician global score, or C-reactive protein levels, and an inverse association between smoking and tender joint count (p = 0.05). Analyses using conventional methods showed a null relationship for all outcomes.Conclusion. Smoking is associated with higher levels of disease activity in RA. Causal methods may be useful for investigations of additional exposures on longitudinal outcome measures in rheumatologic disease. ER -