Introduction
Asthma is the most prevalent chronic respiratory disease worldwide.1 2 Unlike chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), which primarily begins in middle age among people with host risk factors and long-term exposure to tobacco smoke or air pollutants,3–5 asthma is a heterogeneous disease of reversible expiratory airflow limitation, often beginning in childhood.6 Asthma is thought to result from the complex interaction between genetic factors and environmental exposures at critical periods throughout life.7 8
The relationship between tobacco product use and adult asthma is complex. Cigarette smoking has long been thought to contribute to asthma onset and severity in adults (see reviews of prospective studies9 and cross-sectional studies in clinical populations10–13). Yet, several prospective studies found no association or mixed findings.14–18 Moreover, cigarette smokers with asthma frequently use other products, including electronic (e-)cigarettes,19 20 about which there are very few prospective studies.21
Methodological problems may have contributed to previous mixed findings. Many studies of tobacco use and asthma did not assess cigarette smoking history, use of multiple tobacco products and other smoke exposures, such as secondhand smoke and marijuana use, that could be confounders,16 18 22–25 and most prospective studies of asthma and tobacco did not account for COPD.16 17 22–26 (Up to one-third of adults with asthma eventually develop comorbid COPD,27 28 when patients present with features distinct from asthma.29 30) For example, a recent paper22 noted that combustible tobacco and e-cigarette use were both associated with adult-onset asthma; however, that study addressed neither comorbid COPD, nor history of cigarette smoking and other smoke exposures, all important potential confounders. Careful, prospective research is needed to clarify the relation between tobacco product use and asthma outcomes.
The Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) Study is a large, national, longitudinal survey of tobacco product use and self-reported health outcomes.31 This report evaluated the relationships between tobacco product use and asthma diagnosis and symptoms among people aged 18–39 years old without comorbid COPD. Sensitivity analyses explored how adding participants over 40 years and those with comorbid COPD, as well as removing adjustments for cigarette smoking history and other smoke exposures, affected the association between tobacco product use and asthma.