The association between smoking and the development of psoriatic arthritis among psoriasis patients
Annals of Rheumatic Diseases, 10/07/2011
Eder L et al. – Smoking may be inversely associated with psoriatic arthritis (PsA) among psoriasis patients. This association is not present among HLA–C*06–positive individuals.
Methods- In this exploratory case–control study, smoking status was determined at the time of the diagnosis of arthritis for PsA patients and at their first study visit for psoriasis patients, when they were confirmed not to have PsA.
- The proportions of patients exposed to smoking were compared in patients with PsA to those with psoriasis alone.
- A logistic regression model was constructed to test the independent association of smoking and PsA after adjusting for potential confounders.
- The statistical interaction between HLA–C*06 and smoking was tested through a regression model.
- The proportions of current and past smokers were higher in the psoriasis group compared with the PsA group (30.2% vs 23.4% and 26.7% vs 22.3%, p=0.001, respectively).
- On multivariate analysis being a current smoker versus a lifetime non–smoker remained inversely associated with PsA (OR 0.57, p=0.002), while past smoker versus lifetime non–smoker status was no longer significant.
- In a subgroup analysis, smoking remained inversely associated with PsA only among patients who were HLA–C*06 negative.
- Regression analysis revealed that the interaction between smoking status (ever smoked vs lifetime non–smoker) and HLA–C*06 was statistically significant (p=0.01).






