Looking at the Data on Smoking and Post-COVID-19 Syndrome—A Literature Review

Author:

Trofor Antigona Carmen12ORCID,Robu Popa Daniela1,Melinte Oana Elena12,Trofor Letiția3,Vicol Cristina1,Grosu-Creangă Ionela Alina12,Crișan Dabija Radu Adrian12ORCID,Cernomaz Andrei Tudor1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Discipline of Pneumology, III-rd Medical Department, Faculty of Medicine, University of Medicine and Pharmacy “Grigore T. Popa”, 700115 Iasi, Romania

2. Clinical Hospital of Pulmonary Diseases, 700116 Iasi, Romania

3. Private Practice in Psychiatry, 06800 Nice, France

Abstract

Long COVID is a recently described entity that is responsible for significant morbidity and that has consequences ranging from mild to life-threatening. The underlying mechanisms are not completely understood, and treatment options are currently limited, as existing data focus more on risk factors and predictors. Smoking has been reported as a risk factor for poor outcomes of acute SARS-CoV-2 infection and seems to also play a role in mediating post-COVID-19 symptoms. We aimed to review relevant work addressing the interaction between smoking and long COVID in order to characterize smoking’s role as a risk factor and possibly identify new research directions. Methods: The PubMed/MEDLINE database was searched using the keywords ‘smoking’, ‘long COVID’, and ‘post-acute COVID’ to identify relevant English-language articles published up to October 2023. Results and conclusions: From the 374 initial hits, a total of 36 papers were deemed relevant to the aim of the review. There was significant variability concerning the ways in which tobacco usage was quantified and reported; still, there is compelling evidence linking smoking to an increased risk of developing manifestations of post-acute-COVID disease. Some clinical conditions, such as dyspnea, cardiovascular symptoms, and cognitive or mental-health impairment, seem to be relatively strongly associated with smoking, while the connection between smoking and upper-airway involvement seems less certain. The available data support recommending smoking cessation as a clinical tool for the prevention of long COVID.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Medicine (miscellaneous)

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