Philip Morris
Environmental Tobacco Smoke Exposure and Ischaemic Heart Disease: An Evaluation of the Evidence. The Accumulated Evidence on Lung Cancer and Environmental Tobacco Smoke
Fields
- Author
- Hackshaw, A.K.
- Law, M.R.
- Morris, J.K.
- Wald, N.J.
- Law, M.R.
- Type
- PSCI, PUBLICATION SCIENTIFIC
- BIBL, BIBLIOGRAPHY
- Area
- CARCHMAN,RICHARD/OFFICE
- Litigation
- Iwoh/Produced
- Characteristic
- EXTR, EXTRA
- MARG, MARGINALIA
- MISS, MISSING PAGES
- MARG, MARGINALIA
- Site
- R530
- Named Organization
- England Dept of Health
- Author (Organization)
- Bmj
- Royal London School of Medicine
- Royal London School of Medicine + Dentis
- St Bartholomews
- Wolfson Inst of Preventive Medicine
- Royal London School of Medicine
- Named Person
- Doll, R.
- Glantz, S.
- Jarvis, M.
- Law, M.R.
- Wald, N.J.
- Wells, J.
- Glantz, S.
- Master ID
- 2063633034/3485
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Environmental tobacco smoke exposure and ischaemic
heart disease: an evaluation of the evidence
M R Law, J K Morris, NJ Wald
Abstract
Objectives: To estimate the risk of ischaemic heart
disease caused by exposure to environmental tobacco
smoke and to explain why the assodated excess risk is
almost half that of smoking 20 dgarettes per day
when the exposure is only about i% that of smoking.
Design: Meta-analysis of all I9 acceptable published
studies of risk of ischaemic heart disease in li~elong
non-smokers who live with a smoker and in those
who live with a non-smoker, five large prospective
studies of smoking and ischaemic heart disease, and
studies of platelet aggregation and studies of diet
according to exposure to tobacco smoke.
Result.s: The relative risk of ischaemic heart disease
associated with exposure'to en,Aronmental tobacco
smoke was 1.30 (950/0 confidence interval 1.22 to 1.38)
at age 65. At the same age the estimated relative risk
associated with smoking one cigarette per day was
similar (1.39 (1.18 to 1.64)), while for 20 per day it was
1.78 (1.31 to 2.44). Two separate analyses indicated
that non-smokers who live with smokers eat a diet
that places them at a 60/0 higher risk ofischaemic
heart disease, so the direct effect of environmental
tobacco smoke is to increase risk by 23°/0 (14°/0 to
33%), since 1.30/1.06 = 1.23. Platelet aggregation
provides a plausible and quantitatively consistent
mechanism for the low dose effect. The increase in
platelet aggregation produced experimentally by
exposure to environmental tobacco smoke would be
expected to have acute effects increasing the risk of
ischaemic heart disease by 34%.
Conclusion: Breathing other people's smoke is an
important and avoidable cause of ischaemic heart
disease, increasing a person's risk by a quarter.
Introduction
Epidemiological studies have shown that the risk of
ischaemic heart disease is about 30%0 greater in
non-smokers who live with smokers than in those who
do no~t'~ It seems implausible that the effect of
environmental exposure to tobacco smoke should be
so large when the excess risk associated with smoking
20 cigarettes per day is only about 80% at age 65
(the average age of ischaemic heart disease events in
the studies).~'= Environmental exposure to tobacco
smoke is only about l°~ that of smoking~'~; the risk is
nearly half. In this paper we examine the possible
explanations for this surprisingly large association.
Methods
We carried out five sets of analyses using published
dam. Firstly, we conducted a meta-analysis of the stud-
ies of exposure to environmental tobacco smoke (or
passive smoking) and ischaemic heart disease.'~s" We
identified relevant studies through Medline (MESH
terms: smoking, tobacco smoke poRution), by scanning
the reference lists of each study and of review articles,
and by discussion with colleagues..~l the studies used
spouse's smoking as an objective measure of exposure
to environmental tobacco smoke (non-smokers who
live with smokers have greater exposure both inside
and outside the home~ ~z). We" extracted data on
non-Fatal infarction or death ~rom ischaemic heart dis-
ease in never smokers according to whether their
spouses currently smoked or had never smoked,
excluding data on ex-smoker spouses where possible.
We calculated the average of the relative risk estimates,
adjusted for age and sex, of the studies, each w~ighted
by the inverse of its variance (as there was no heteroge-
neity). For reasons given below in the discussion, we
excluded two studies reported together)s ~
Secondly, to determine the risk of ischaemic heart
disease associated with smoking at low doses, we
analysed the dose-response relation between smoking
and ischaemic heart disease from five cohort studies of
men recruited during the 1950s (selected because of
their large size).~q~ We analysed the five studies
separately. In each the smokers had been divided into
three or four categories according to the number of
cigarettes smoked. We fitted logistic regression lines, in
10 year age groups, of the risk of ischaemic heart
disease (relative to non-smokers) on the adjusted aver-
age number of cigarettes smoked per day in each
smoking category. The number of cigarettes was
adjusted as described previously,3" using data on
biochemical markers of tobacco smoke intake to allow
for the fact that heavier smokers inhale less from each
cigarette on average. From each regression line we
determined the risk of ischaemic heart disease
associated with smoking one dgarette per day by linear
extrapolation. We then calculated the average of the
five estimates, weighted (since there was no heteroge-
neity) by the inverse of variance.
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Thirdly, we used the same cohort studies to
determine how much of the excess risk of ischaemic
heart disease is reversible many years after stopping
smoking, as an indirect estimate of the extent of
confounding.
Fourthly, because people exposed to environmen-
tal tobacco smoke eat less fruit and vegetables and this
is associated with an increased risk of ischaemic heart
disease, so confounding will arise,~' ~' we analysed pub-
lished data to estimate the extent of confounding. We
used published estimates of the increase in risk of
ischaemic heart disease associated with a decrease of
one standard deviation (SD) in consumption of fruit,
vegetables, and antioxidant vitamins as markers of fruit
and vegetable consumption.~ We identified studies that
measured dietary intake of these nutrients (using
weighed dietary inventory or 94 hour recall or food
frequent, questionnaires with ~tuantitative estimates of
portion size)~2"59 in smokers and non-smokers and in
non-smokers who lived with smokers and did not
(additional MeSH terms: fruit, vegetables, carotene,
nutrition surveys, diet surveys, diet records, food
habits). We calculated the differences as a proportion
of the SD in each study. Thus we estimated the excess
risk of ischaemic 'heart disease am'ibutable to
differences in consumption of the nutrients in each
stud): @e also examined the relation between smoking
and other risk factors for ischaemic heart diseas~
Finally, because of the proposal that platelet aggre-
gation may account for the large effect of exposure to
environmental tobacco smoke on risk of ischaemic
heart disease,~ we analysed published data (additional
MeSH term: platelet aggregation). We fitted a logistic
regression line to the data on risk of ischaemic heart
<lisease according to platelet aggregation~° and
estimated the increase in risk of ischaemic heart
disease for a 1 SD increase in pl'atelet aggregation. We
determined the effects of smoking and of exposure to
environmental tobacco smoke on platelet aggregation
(expressed in SDs) from published experimental
studies6t~ and calculated the average increase, weight-
ing by the number of subjects in each study. From these
data we estimated the immediate increase in risk of
ischaemic heart disease attributable to smoking and
exposure to environmental tobacco smoke. We did not
use cross sectional studies of platelet aggregation in
smokers and non-smokers because they are insensi-
tiven; the effects of smoking are short term6r and may
0.5
Studies
Fig 1 Relative risk estimates (with 95% confidence intervals),
adjusted for age and sex, from nine prospective studies (solid
circles) and 10 case-control studies (open circles) comparing
ischaemic heart disease in lifelong non-smokers whose spouse
currently smoked with those whose spouse had never smoked (16
published studies (from left to right'~'=) and three with results cited
by others from abstracts or theses= 3~)
not be apparent in smokers who had not smoked for a
few hours before blood was collected.
Results
Risk of ischaemic heart disease at low exposure to
tobacco smoke
Figure I shows the results of the I9 studies as the risk
of ischaemic heart disease in never smokers whose
spouses currently smoked relative to the risk in those
whose spouses had never smoked (detail of design of
the studies has been summarised previously~ ~).~*~
There were 6600 ischaemic heart disease events in
total. There was no significant heterogeneity (X~
and figure 1 shows that the estimates from the
individual studies axe consistent with each other. The
summary estimate of relative risk was 1.30 (95% confi-
dence interval 1.22 tol.38; P<0.00I), similar to the
estimates from earlier meta-analyses with fewer
studies?"5 Summary estimates were similar in women
and men in cohort studies (in which almost all ischae-
mic heart disease events were deaths) and case-conu:ol
studies (in which most events were non-fatal infarcts)
and with or without inclusion of three unpublished
studies.
It has been proposed that publication bias accounts
for the association?~ The number of unpublished stud-
Amed©zn Cancer Society 9 state
0 <10 10-19 ~20
British doctors
0 1-14 15-24 ~25
US veteranc
American Cancer Society 25 state Pooling project
o 1-9 10-20 21-39 ~,~0 0 '1-9 10-19 )~o
0 10 20 ~21
No of cigarettes smoked per day
Fig 2 Estimates (with 95% confidence limits) from five studiess'~z of the risk of ischaemic heart
disease in current cigarette smokers according to number of cigarettes
smoked relative to never smokers (age standardised to age 65). Scale on the horizontal axis is
linear with respect not to the number of cigarettes smoked but to the
corresponding concentrations of biochemical markers=
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BMJ VOLUMES15 18OCTOBER 1997

Papers
ies would need to be implausibly large. As a simple
approximation, eight of the 19 individual studies (fig 1)
were significandy positive (a probability for each of less
than 1 in 40 if there were no association). The total
number of studies needed to generate these by chance
would be more than 320 (8 x 60), of which only 19 were
published. Exclusion from the analysis of all studies
recording fewer than 100 events (as selective
publication is more likely to affect small studies) made
no difference to the relative risk estimate.
nisk of smoking one ci~rnU per any
Figure 2 shows the dose-response relation in each of
the five studies of smoking and ischaemic heart disease
(age standardised to age 65). The risk of ischaemic
heart disease increases continuously with daily
cigarette consumption, but in all five studies linear
extrapolation of the regression line back to zero dose
(no cigarettes per day) does not yield the expected
relative risk estimate of 1.0. The estimates from the five
individual studies of the risk at low dose ale consistent
with each other, and the weighted average relative risk
at one dgarette per day (defining risk in non-smokers
as 1.0) was 1.39 (1.18 to 1.64; P<0.001). At 20
cigarettes per day this risk was 1.78.
Table 1 shows the relative risk of ischaemic heart
disease associated with smoking one cigarette per day
accordkqg to age, firom the five cohort studies. The esti-
mates decline with increasing age at death (P < 0.001).
The average age of ischaernic heart disease events in
the studies of exposure to environmental tobacco
smoke was about 65 years and the estimate of 1.39 is
dose to the estimate of 1.30 from these studies. With a
linear dose-response relation the expected excess risk
from smoking one cigarette per day is 4% (1/201h the
excess risk of 78% from smoking 20 dgarettes per day);
with environmental exposure it is 0.8% (1% of 78%). A
high risk at low dose is therefore seen in the studies of
smoking (59% excess risk v 40/0 expected) and in stud-
ies of environmental exposure (30% v 0.8%).
How much of the association is due to confounding
by diet?
Direct estimate
The diet of smokers and of non-smokers who live with
them differs from that of non-smokers who live with
non-smokers. This dietary difference, rather than the
exposure itself, may account for the high risk ofischae-
mic heart disease,e' **' The most pronounced difference
is a lower consumption of fruit and vegeta-
bles,~54, st ~3 ~ ~7 which contain nutrients that may
protect against ischaemic heart disease, including folic
Table 1 Estimated dsk (95% confidence interval) of ischaemic heart disease relative to
that in unexposed never smokers, from environmental exposure to tobacco smoke (see
fig 1) and from actively smoking one cigarette per day (see fig 2)
Age at death F, ovlmnmental Active smoking
(yeats) exposure I cigarette per day 20 cigarettes par day
45 ~ 1.93 (0.99 to 3.78) 4A6 (1.21 to 18.42)
55 ~ 1.64 (0.95 tO 2.81) 3.07 (1.06 tO 8,88)
65 1.30 (1.22 tO 1.38) 1.39 (1.18 to 1.64) 1.78 (1.31 to 2.44)
75 -- 1.15 (0.83 to 1,60) 1.34 (0.72 to 2.51)
acid,TM potassium, and linoleic acicU' These were not
measured as potential confounding factors in studies
of passive smoking and ischaemic heart disease. Fruit,
vegetables, carotenes, vitamin C, and vitamin E ale
highly correlated with each other, and the regression
analyses for each nutrient were not adjusted for these
correlations, so each nutrient will serve as a marker for
the risk of ischaemic heart disease associated with fi'uit
and vegetable consumption in general, even though I~
carotene and vitamin E do not themselves reduce
mortality from ischaernic heart disease.'* 7t n Table 2
shows summary estimates from cohort studies of the
relative risk of ischaemic heart disease associated with
a difference of 1 SD in consumption of all fi-uit, all veg-
etables, carotenes, vitamin C, and vitamin E as markers
of fruit and vegetable consumption.
Almost an studies showed a lower consumption of
these nutrients in active smokers than non-smokers,
but the differences were heterogeneous across studies
(which is not surprising since fruit and vegetable
consumption varies in different communities and
different seasons, so the difference between smokers
and non-smokers is likely to vary). Table 2 shows, from
all studies reporting on each nutrient, the median dif-
ference and the largest difference. The estimates of the
excess risk ofischaemic heart disease corresponding to
the median estimates of the dietary difference in no
case exceed 3°/0 (suggesting that diet explains only a
3% excess risk of ischaemic heart disease in smokers);
the largest estimates (based on the largest estimate of
the dietary difference from any study and the upper
confidence limits of the estimates of the association
between the nutrients and ischaemic heart disease) do
not cxceed 9%.
The difference between smokers and non-smokers
in plasma low density lipoprotein cholesterol is
small--an estimated 0.07 mmolA,'~ corresponding to
an excess risk of ischaemic heart disease (at age 65) of
about 3%.TM The over-all excess risk of ischaemic heart
disease attributable to dietary differences in smokers
(fruit and vegetables and serum cholesterol) is thus
about 6%. Blood pressure is no greater in smokers than
Table 2 Estimates of increased risk of ischaemic heart disease in smokers relative to non-smokers,
attributable to lower consumption
of fruit and vegetables
Madrer of Relative risk of ischaemic
consumption of frail heart disease for decrease in
and vegetables consumption of I $04~
Difference In consumption (smoker~ minus non-smoksr~)
Oifference (prupod|on of I SOl
Estlmat| of relative risk Of
Ischaemio heart d~ssase
No of studies Median" Largest Median LargesSe
All fruit 1.16 (1.02 tO 1.31) 5~s~st =st --0.22 -0.33
1.03 1.09
All vegetabtes 1.23 (1.08 to 1.40) 6~*~s* ~ -.-O.t2 -0.25
1.03 Log
Carotenes 1.06 (1.03 to 1.11) 9*t'~
--0.20 -0.34 1.01 1.04
Vitamin O 1.05 (1.00 to 1.09) 134a'~s
-0.24 -0.49 1.01 1.04
V~'min E 1,05 (1.02 to 1.10) 6~z'~a
-0.12 -0,27 1.01 1.03
*Median differences correspond to consumption lower by 10.15% in smokers than non-smokers.
1"Based on upper confidence limit of relative risk estimate and largest difference between smokers
and non-smokers.
.... :
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tapers
Table 3 Risk of death from ischaemic heart disease in men who
had stopped smoking for 20 or more years, relative to that in
men who had never smoked
No of deaths from
tschaemic heart disease Observed/expected
Study Obselved Expected" (95% CI)
US V'eteransn 2418 2303 1.05 (1.01 to 1.09)
American Cancer Socie~/, 150 141 1.06 (0.90 to 1.25)
25 statese
British doctorsT~ 200 174 ' 1.15 (1.00 to 1.32)
All studies 2768 2618 1.06 (1.02 to 1,10)
"From rates in never smokers, age adjusted.
"i'15 or more years.
non-smokers (and body mass index is less); these and
other risk factors for ischaemic heart disease have a
negligible effect on the relation between smoking and
ischaemic heart disease.~5
For exposure to environmental tobacco smoke the
median difference in fruit and vegetable consumption
between non-smokers who do and do not live with
smokers, based on all available studies (2-3 for each
marker), was 0.10 SD for fruit,~5~ 0.06 for vegeta-
bles," ~ 0.26 for carotenes,~" ~ and 0.18 for vitamin
C.~ ~ ~ These are generally smaller than the median
estimates for smokers (table 2). The corresponding
estimates of the excess risk of ischaemic heart disease
are I-2%.
The differences in serum cholesterol'9 =' ~ ~ blood
pressure)~ :~ 2s and body mass index~ 0-~ ~ ~ ~ in never
smokers according to whether or not the spouse
smoked were imperceptible (as expected since the dif-
ferences between active smokers and non-smokers are
so smaU). Combining the differences showed no
significant difference, with upper confidence limits
inconsistent with a serum cholesterol more than 2%
higher, blood pressure more than 40/0 higher, and body
mass index more than 6% higher. Estimates of the
relative risk of ischaemic heart disease unadjusted and
adjusted for blood pressure, serum cholesterol, body
mass index, and a measure of sodal class (published in
six epidemiological studies:~'~ ~ ~ ~o_) were similar: the
weighted average of the adjusted estimates, 1.57 (1.00
to 2.13), was no Iower than that of the unadjusted esti-
mates, 1.47 (1.00 to 2.19).
Indirect estimate
Three of the five smoking cohort studies cited above
followed the men for 20 or more years. Almost all the
excess risk reversed (table 3); the residual excess risk
was 6% (2% to 10%). Thi~ sets an upper limit to any
effect of confounding that is similar to our direct
estimate of confounding.
Table 4 Estimates of the extent of confounding and of the cause and effect relation in
the associations of passive and active smoking with ischaemic heart disease at age 65
Relative flsk of [schaemic head disease (95% Cl)
Active smoking
Nature of association Passive smoking 1 cigarette per day 20 cigarettes per day
Overall (from figs 1 and 2)° 1.30 (1.22 to 1.38) 1.39 (1.18 to 1,64) 1,78 (1,31 to 2A4)
Irreversible: confounding" 1,06 (1.02 to 1,10) 1.06 (1.02 to 1.10) 1.06 (1.02 to 1.10)
Revarsih~e: cause and effect 1.231. (1.14 to 1.33) 1,311. (1.11 to 1.55) 1.691" (1.23 to 2.33)
• Estimates of the overall association in passive and active smokers, and of the extent of
confounding, all
apply to an average age at death of 65 years.
1"1,30/1.06=1.23; 1.39/1.06=1.31; 1.78/1.06=1.68. Confidence intervals take those of the "overall"
and
~confounding" relative risk estimates into account; variances (in logarithms) were added.
People who gave up smoking in recent years also
changed their diet2"~ ~ We based our analysis on older
studies, in which the former smokers would have given
up before 1955, when dietary change was not widely
advocated on health grounds (indeed, consumption of
saturated fat increased in the United States between
1945 and 1955~). Significant dietary change in these
studies is unlikely but even the recent data on dietary
change after stopping smoking° ~" would increase the
estimate of 6% to no more than 12%, similar to the
direct estimate of the largest effect. " "
Size of the causal assodation
Confounding due to dietary differences accounts for a
relative risk estimated as 1.06 in smokers. Of the over-
all relative risk of ischaemic heart disease assodated
with environmental exposure to tobacco smoke of
1.30, the estimated relative risk for the causal relation is
therefore 1.2~ (1.~0/1.06). It will in fact be a little
higher since dietary confounding is less than in smob
ers` Even when based on the largest estimate of
confounding in smokers it is 1.16 (1.:30/1.1,'2). For
smoking one cigarette per day the overall relative risk is
1.39 and the esgimate Of the causal relation is 1.:31
(1.39/1.06). Table 4 summarises the estimates.
Mechanism of effect: platelet aggregation
Figure ~ shows the risk of ischaemic heart disease in a
cohort of 2398 men (162 of whom had had a myocar-
dial infarction) divided into five groups according to
ranked measures of platelet aggregation (from the
Caerphilly collaborative heart disease study~. The
association is linear. The estimate from the logisdc
regression line fitted to the data was that an increase in
platelet aggregation of 1 SD (from ;my point on the
distribution) is associated with a relative risk of ischae-
mic heart disease of 1.]3 (1.19 to 1.48; P ~ 0.001).
Table 5 summarises the experimental studies on
smoking and platelet aggregation (from three different
research groups).~* The effects of smoking and
em,ironmental exposure are similar. The effect of
smoking was similar in non-smokers who smoked on
the one occasion (for experimental purposesfz~ and
in habitual smokers abstinent for 8-10 hours,u'~ From
the relation beBveen platelet aggregation and ischae-
mic heart disease estimated above, the immediate
increase in the risk of ischaemic heart disease amn~butTM
able to effects on platelet aggregation is estimated to be
4:3% for smoking and :34% for environmental exposure
(table 5). These estimates of the immediate effect are, as
expected, a little higher than those of the long term
effect of intermittent exposure over the day in table 4.
The actions of smoking on other factors that
increase risk of ischaemic heart disease are likely to
increase continuously with dose such that the effect of
exposure to environmental tobacco smoke is imper-
ceptible. Thus plasma fibrinogen concentration is
higher in active smokers but not detectably greater in
non-smokers who live with smokers than in those who
do not (the 950/0 confidence limits from combining
three studies'~ ~ 7.~ were 4% lower and 40/0 higher). The
effects on high density lipoprotein cholesterolv ~ and
carboxyhaemog]obin~'~ ~ are also imperceptible. The
more gradual increase in the excess risk from :39%
smoking one cigarette per day to 780/0 at '2_0 per day (at
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BMJ VOLUMES15 ISOCTOBER 1997

Papers
P/ate/ot a#gre#atlon (SOs from the mean)
Fig 3 Risk (95% confidence intsfval) of ischaemic heart disease
relative to lowest group according to measurements of plate[et
aggregation (induced by ADP), expressed as SDs from the mean,
with fitted regression line (data from Elwood et al~°)
age 65) is atm'outable to these and other non-platelet
factors.
Discussion
Evidence for a large effect f~om a small exposm-e
Environmental exposure to tobacco smoke is assod-
ated with an excess risk of ischaemic heart disease of
30% and is estimated to cause an excess risk of 23%
(95% confidence interval 14% to 330/0), increasing the
risk of death fi'om ischaemic heart disease between the
ages of 60 and 69 in British men who do not smoke
from about 5% to 6%. So large an effect fi'om a
relatively small exposure, though unlikely on first
impression, is supported by a great deal of evidence.
The association cannot be explained by bias in the
studies of environmental exposure to tobacco smoke.
Publication bias can be rejected, as discussed above.
Misdassification bias arises because some people who
claim never to have smoked are former or current
smokers; they are at greater risk ofischaemic heart dis-
ease and more likely" to have spouses who smoke. This
bias has been found to be of minor importance in
studies of lung cancer~; it will be negli~ole in studies of
ischaernic hcar~ disease because the relative risk of
ischaernic hcar~ disease in smokers is so much smaller
than that of lung cancer (about 2 compared to 20).
The cohor~ studies of smokers also show a substan-
tial risk at low dose (table I).
Studies directly measuring the e,xtent of atheroma-
tous disease in arteries have confirmed a similar effect
in smokers and in non-smokers exposc,d to environ-
mental tobacco smoke, and a smaller effect in
unexposed non-smoker~~' ~
The association cannot be explained by confound-
ing. If all the excess risk of ischaemic hcar~ disease in
non-smokers who live with smokers compared with
those who live with non-smokers were to be explained
by their dietary differences, about half the excess risk in
smokers would also have to be attn'butable to
differences in die~ The excess risk largely reverses on
stopping smoking, indicating that this is not the case.
The estimate of the extent of confounding as the
excess risk that is not reversed many years after
stopping smoking (6%) corroborates the estimate of
the excess risk to be expected fi'om the dietary
differences.
The effect of tobacco smoke on platelet aggrega-
tion provides a plausible mechanism for the low dose
effect The immediate effect of a single environmental
exposure is to increase risk by an estimated 34% (table
5). This will be an underestimate because of regression
dilution bias (which could not be a/lowed for because
repeat meastaes were not available), but will also tend
to be an overestimate because it does not rdlect typical
intermittent exposure to environmental tobacco
smoke over the day, which will be somewhat less. One
hour after a single exposure the effect on platelet
aggregation is attenuated by about half," so the likely
effect of intermittent exposure throughout the day
' could be consistent with our estimate of a 23% increase
in risL Simple corroboration is provided by the obser-
vation that aspirin abolishes the effect of tobacco
smoke on platelet aggregation~ ~ and reduces the risk
of ischaemic heart disease by about 25%.m The experi-
mental evidence of a similar effect of smoking and
environmental exposure on platelet aggregation is
corroborated by studies showing that the generation of
thromboxane A~ fi-om arachidonic acid (which leads to
platelet aggregation) was also similar?= A small dose of
an agonist seems to have a maximal effect on platelet
aggregation."
A mete-analysis of the studies of occdpadonal
exposure to environmental tobacco smoke exposure
indicated a disproportionately large effect: relative risk
1~6 (1.08 to 1.71).~ The occupational studies lack the
susceptibility to confounding because non-smokers
who work with smokers will not share their diet-
In animal experiments, eight studies on four
spedes (involving exposure to the smoke from
simultaneous combustion ofbetwden one and 10 dga-
rettes, generally for 4-6 hours per day over 6-16 weeks)
all showed pronouuced vascular toxidty of the
Table 5 Results of experiments of exposure to tobacco smoke and platelet aggregation and the
associated immediate increase in risk
of ischaemic heart disease
Change i.n platelet aggregation
ratio alter
=xpo~mf
Associated ralatlve dzk of ischznmic hall1
F.xpOlOre AIIso|O|I llo of
standard deviations dlsll+Zl (9S%C|l~
Unexposed control period (non..smokem, n=lO~t) 0 0
1.00
Environmental tobacco smoke(20 minutes, n=lOm) 0.09" 1.03
1.34 (1.19 to 1.50)"
Active smoking: smoldng one~ or two'~'~" cigarettes 0.11" 1.25
(awrage of 6 studies, n,,158)
1.4~ (1.24 to 1.63)"
"P~O.OQ1.
1"Absolute ct~ange is an estimate of [~e propo~an of all ¢ircu{aling platelets t/~at were
incorporated into a(jgre~ates as a result of ~e exposure; platelet aggregation
ratios were on average 0.83 before and 0.72 after active smoking.
$From lt~e assodation between platetet aggregation and ischaernic heart disease shown in figure 3.
BMJ VOLUME31~ 18OLWOBER t~,)97
977

exposure.~ The size of the resulting infarct after
experimental occlusion of a coronary artery was
50-1000/0 greater~ and arterial atheromatous disease
was about twice as extensive"~ in exposed animals
than in unexposed control~
Evidence against a large effect at low dose
Pipe and dgar smokers have a low risk of ischaemic
heart disease (the risk reladve to non-smokers was esti-
mated as 1.13 for pipe smokers, 1.30 for dgar smokers,
and 1.75 for dgarette smokers~). Pipe and dgar smob
ers tend not to inhale when smoking and because of
characteristics of the smoke can absorb nicotine
through the mouth,9s but they must inhale their own
environmental tobacco smoke in the same way that
non-smokers inhale other people's smoke. Their low
risk might at first sight weigh against the view that
inhaling environmental tobacco smoke poses a
material risk ofischaemic heart disease. However, men
who smoke only pipes or dgars smoke much less
frequently than cigarette smokers. In a study of 21 520
m.en, 9618 current pipe or cigar smokers smoked on
average three times a day whereas 4184 dgarette
smokers smoked on average 90 tLmes a day.~ The dif-
ference in this frequency, in view of the short term
nature of the effect on platelet aggregation (half life
less than an hour~, may weal reconcile the observa-
tions of passive smokers and the risk of ischaemic
heart disease among pipe smoker~
Exz/aded stud/zs
A separate analysis of one of the studies of
environmental tobacco smoke exposure and ischaemic
heart disease in the set of 19 studies (fig 1), and of two
data sets not published elsewhere (from the US
National Center for Health Statistics and the American
Cancer Society) has been published by Layard and
LeVois, consultants to the tobacco industry.~s They
"reported a combined reladve risk estimate from the
three studies of 1.00, with a narrow 950/o confidence
interval (0.97 to 1.04).~ This negative result is
statistically inconsistent with the estimate of 1~0 (1.99
to 1~8) from the above analysis of 19 studies
(P<0.001). The difference is too great for the two
groups of studies to be combined as separate valid esti-
mates; one must be flawed. We took the estimate from
the 19 studies as valid and rejected that of Layard and
LeVois, since there is no reason to reject an analysis
based on 19 independent studies in favour of one from
a single group with a vested interest.
Direct evidence supports this decision. Firstly, in
one of the three studies the relative risk estimate (men
and women combined) of Layard and LeVois of 0.98
(0.90 to1.07)s was inconsistent with that from an inde-
pendent analysis of the same data commissioned by
the American Cancer Society (the owners of the dam)
of 1.91 (1.06 to 1~8)?I Secondly, even in the absence of
a causal effect, the combined estimate of 1.00 is incon-
sistent with any confounding from the dietary
differences. Thirdiy, the result is inconsistent with the
data on low dose active smoking, the evidence on
platelet aggregadon, the animal studies and the other
evidence summarised above
• Analysis of 19 epidemiological studies shows
that people who have never smoked have an
estimated 30% greater risk of ischaemic heart
disease if they live with a smoker (P < 0.001)
• This is surprisingly large--almost half the risk of
smoking 90 dgarettes per day even though the
exposure is only 1% of that of a smoker
• The excess risk from smoking one dgarette per
day is 39%--similar to the risk in a non-smoker
living with a smoker
• The effect is mainly explained by a non-linear
dose-response relation between expsoure to
tobacco smoke and risk of heart disease
• Detailed analysis shows no significant bias;
dietary confounding can account for an excess
risk of only 6%, so revising the excess risk from
30% to 93%
Conclusions
We believe that there is no satisfactory alternative
interpretation of the evidence reviewed here than that
environmental exposure to tobacco smoke causes an
increase in risk of ischaemic heart disease of the order
of 950/0. In proportionate terms this is of similar
magnitude to the effects of exposure to environmental
tobacco smoke on lung cancer,~ but the number of
excess deaths from heart disease will be far greater
because heart disease is so much more common than
lung cancer ,in hon-smokers. Reversal of the effect
would reduce the risk of ischaemic heart disease by
about as much as taking aspirin, or by what many peo-
ple could achieve through dietary change. The effect of
environmental tobacco smoke is not trivial as is often
thought. It is a serious environmental hazard, and one
that is easily avoided. The evidence on ischaemic heart
disease warrants further action in preventing smoking
in public buildings and enclosed working environ-
ments. The hazard in the home requires greater public
education so that smokers recognise the risk to which
they expose members of their family. It is also
important that clinicians advise that families of patients
with known coronary artery disease do not smoke in
their presence_
We thank Richard Doll Martin Jarvis, Stanton GIantz, and
Judson Wells for their comments on earlier drafts.
Funding: The Department of Health (England) supported
this work. although the views are our own.
Conflict of interes~ None.
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~ BMJ 1997",3
(Aa~p~d 22 Se~ 1997)
The accumulated evidence on lung cancer and
environmental tobacco smoke
A K Hackshaw, M R Law, NJ Wald
a~d p 973
Department of
Medicine, WoL~on
Imdmte of
Prev~dve
Medicine, St
Bartholomew% and
Roy'ad London
School of'Mediclne
and Dem~try,
London
EC1M 6BQ
A K Hack3haw,
M R La~4
NJ Wald,
Correspondence to:
Profe~or Wald
njwa/d@mdx
qmw.a~uk
BMJ 19~7".315.'980-88
Abstract
Objective: To estimate the Hsk of lung cancer in
Lifelong non-smokers exposed to environmental
tobacco smoka
Desigm Analysis of $7 published epidemiological
studies of the risk of lung cancer (469-6 cases) in
non-smokers who did and did not live with a smoker.
The risk estimate was compared with that from linear
extrapolation of the risk in smokers using seven
studies of biochemical markers of tobacco smoke
Main outcome measure: Reladve risk of lung cancer
in lifelong non-smokers according to whether the
spouse currendy smoked or had never smoked.
Results: The excess risk of lung cancer was 24% (95%
confidence interval 15% to $6°/o) in non-smokers who
lived with a smoker (P < 0.001). Adjustment for the
effects of bias (positive and negative) and dietary
confounding had little overall effect; the adjusted
excess risk was 26% (7% to 47O/o). The dose-response
reladon of the risk of lung cancer with both the
nnmber of dgarettes smoked by the spouse and the
duration of exposure was significant. The excess risk
derived by linear extrapolation from that in smokers
was 190/% similar to the direct estimate of 26%.
Condusiom The epidemiological and biochemical
evidence on exposure to environmental tobacco
smoke, with the supporting evidence of tobacco
specific carcinogens in the blood and urine of
non-smokers exposed to environmental tobacco
smoke, provides compelling confirmation that
breathing other people's tobacco smoke is a cause of
lung cancer.
Introduction
Ten years ago scientific committees and national
organisa~ons concluded that exposure to environmen-
tal tobacco smoke (also called passive smoking) is a
cause of lung cancer.~'~ Substantial additional evidence
has since been published, and we report a new analysis.
The additional data permit a more predse estimate of
the sizc of the association, with a further assessment of
whether it is cause and effect by seeking a dose-
response relation and examining whether sources of
bias and confounding could account for the assod-
ation. We also compared the direct estimate of risk
from epidemiological studies with that fi'om a low dose
linear extrapolation of the risk in smokers using
biochemical markers of exposure to tobacco smok~
As before~~ the estimate of effect was the relative
risk of lung cancer in lifelong non-smokers according
to whether the spouse currently smoked or had never
smoked. Spousal exposure is the best a-v-ailable
measure: it is well defined and has been validated using
biochemical markers.~ It reflects exposure in general
because non-smokers who live with smokers tend to be
more exposed to tobacco smoke fi-om other sources,
because they are more likely to mix socially with smok-
ers) Workplace exposure varies considerably and is
difficult to measure_
Me~o~
Direct estimate of risk of lung cancer from
epidemiological studies
Studies of environmental tobacco smoke and lung
cancer were identified from Medline, the dtations in
each study, and consultation with colleagues. We
980
BM~ VOLUME315 18 OCTOBER 1997
