EXCLI Journal : Experimental and Clinical Sciences (Nov 2023)

Prevalence and impact of tobacco use disorder on in-hospital mortality in patients hospitalized with non-group 1 pulmonary hypertension

  • Rupak Desai,
  • Zainab Gandhi,
  • Saher taj Shiza,
  • Akhil Jain,
  • Hiren Koshiya,
  • Bibi Alli-Ramsaroop,
  • Agatha Olawunmi Akinsete,
  • Eko Wilson,
  • Pranathi Rudra,
  • Mohan Sai Sunith Vegesna,
  • Madiha Bari,
  • Ankit Vyas,
  • Bisharah Rizvi,
  • Salim Surani

DOI
https://doi.org/10.17179/excli2023-6409
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22
pp. 1200 – 1210

Abstract

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Numerous studies indicated that patients with tobacco use disorder (TUD) are inversely associated with mortality in what is known as the smoker's paradox. However, limited studies have been conducted on the impact of TUD on the in-hospital mortality rates of patients with secondary pulmonary hypertension (PH, Non-Group 1 PH). Using the 2019 National Inpatient Sample, we identified PH and divided it into TUD and non-TUD to compare the comorbidities and in-hospital mortality between the two after 1:1 propensity-score matching. Of 1,129,440 PH hospitalizations, 12.1 % had TUD. After matching (n=133545, each group), TUD had lower median age (62 vs. 63), higher females (49 vs. 46.6 %), blacks (25.9 vs. 25.3 %), lower household income (40.8 vs. 32.7 %), Medicaid (22.4 vs. 14.8 %), non-elective (93.5 vs. 89.8 %), rural (9.3 vs. 6.7 %), urban non-teaching (17.2 vs 15.8 %) admissions. All CV comorbidities and other substance use were higher in TUD except CHF and valvular heart disease, TUD+ cohort and lower mortality (3.3 vs. 4.2 %, OR 0.78, p<0.001), higher routine discharges (53.8 vs. 51.3 %, p<0.001) and lower total charges ($47155 vs. 51909, p<0.001) than non-TUD. Although PH patients with TUD had a higher comorbidity burden, they had lower in-hospital mortality rates along with lower total charges of hospitalization, mandating real-world data to validate these results.

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