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. 2024 Apr 27;25:185. doi: 10.1186/s12931-024-02818-x

Table 3.

Associations between filtered cigar and cigarette use status and functionally important respiratory symptoms (Wave 2 – Wave 5 population averaged), PATH Study 2014–2019

Tobacco use status Functionally important respiratory symptoms (≥ 3 symptoms) Obs = 40,446 a
Obs Weighted %
(95% CI)
Unadjusted OR (95% CI) Adjusted OR
(95% CI)
Never smokers of cigarettes or filtered cigars Obs = 19,406 1,289 5.9 (5.3, 6.7) Ref Ref
Current established filtered cigar smokers Obs = 298 49 14.7 (10.4, 20.3) 4.28 (2.70, 6.80) 2.36 (1.32, 4.20)
Current established cigarette smokers Obs = 20,115 4,659 22.3 (21.3, 23.3) 4.96 (4.27, 5.76) 2.57 (2.15, 3.08)
Current established dual smokers of filtered cigars and cigarettes Obs = 627 153 23.2 (19.2, 27.7) 4.77 (3.55, 6.41) 2.39 (1.69, 3.38)

OR odds ratio, Obs observations

Bolded estimates are statistically significant (p < 0.05)

Ns are unweighted; percentages and ORs are weighted using the Wave 5 all-waves weights for the Wave 1 Cohort

Excludes those with COPD and other non-asthma respiratory diseases

Adjusted for age (18–24, 25–39, 40–54, 55 +), sex, race/ethnicity, education, BMI, cigarette pack years, duration of cigar use, secondhand smoke exposure, past month marijuana use, and current established use of at least one of: ENDS, pipe, hookah, smokeless tobacco, snus. Also adjusted for current established use of traditional cigars and cigarillos

aOverall Obs represents unadjusted model and does not take into account missingness on covariates. 10,847 observations were missing on covariates in the adjusted model