TORONTO — Women who smoke have a dramatically higher risk of developing
an abdominal aortic aneurysm than those who never used tobacco, say researchers,
adding yet another reason to the long list of reasons for butting out or
avoiding getting hooked in the first place.
In a study published online Tuesday by the British Medical Journal, researchers
found that female smokers are four times more likely to have an aortic aneurysm
rupture or need repair, compared to women who have quit smoking.
Furthermore, women who smoke have an eight-fold higher risk of rupture or the
need for repair than those who never took up the habit, the study found.
Previous research has shown that tobacco use amplifies the prevalence of aortic
aneurysms in men, as well.
"Smoking is much more potent a factor on aortic aneurysm than it is in coronary
artery disease or cerebral vascular disease ... many times more," said lead
author Dr. Frank Lederle, referring to the increased risk of heart attack and
stroke due to smoking's contribution to diseased blood vessels.
"What we don't know is the method of causation," Lederle, an internist at
Minnesota's VA Medical Center, said Tuesday from Minneapolis.
An aneurysm occurs when an area in the wall of the aorta - the body's largest
artery that runs from the heart to the abdomen before dividing into two blood
vessels to the legs - is weakened and begins ballooning out. The aneurysm can
rupture, causing a person to bleed to death within seconds to hours.
Although more common in men, abdominal aortic aneurysms are more deadly in
women. Proportionally fewer women than men survive surgery to repair the artery.
But the condition is often under the radar for both doctors and patients.
"There are no symptoms until the aneurysm begins to rupture," Lederle said. "And
that can be 10 years after it starts to form. So here's a disease that lies
dormant for many years, easily detectable with ultrasound and yet frequently
isn't detected and ultimately can be disastrous, because once rupture begins, 75
to 80 per cent of people who start to rupture will die."
"Half never get to an operating room and the operative mortality is over 50 per
cent."
The research involved analyzing data from the U.S. Women's Health Initiative
study, and looked at risk factors for rupture and repair of abdominal aortic
aneurysms in almost 162,000 postmenopausal women, who were followed for an
average of about eight years.
There were 184 reported aneurysm repairs or ruptures during the study and 14
deaths were directly attributed to the condition.
Intriguingly, the researchers found that women on hormone replacement therapy or
with diabetes had a lower risk of aneurysm events occurring.
Previous studies have shown that diabetic men are also less likely to develop
abdominal aortic aneurysm.
As for the effects of HRT, more research will be needed to determine the role of
the therapy in preventing the condition in women. However, Lederle speculated
that female hormones like estrogen and progesterone are thought to help keep
blood vessels healthy.
"We're certainly not advising anyone to take hormone replacement therapy for
this purpose, because we have large randomized trials in the Women's Health
Initiative that show it's not beneficial across the full range of important
(health) effects," he said.
"What we're saying is that, curiously, it seems in this study to be protective
of this one disease, and so that should guide future laboratory research, maybe
drug development, but absolutely should not be a recommendation to treat with
hormone replacement therapy to prevent aortic aneurysm."
In an accompanying BMJ editorial, Prof. Janet Powell of Imperial College London
and Prof. Paul Norman of the University of Western Australia said that the
findings emphasize the need for educating women about quitting smoking to remain
a public health priority.
They warn that if the incidence of abdominal aortic aneurysm in women continues
to rise, then a population screening program for women who have smoked or
continue to smoke may need to be implemented.
Last month, the Canadian Society for Vascular Surgery called for a national
ultrasound screening program for abdominal aortic aneurysms in all men aged 65
to 75 and high-risk women 65 and older. The condition occurs in about five per
cent of men and almost one per cent of women over 65.