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Using expired air carbon monoxide to determine smoking status during pregnancy: preliminary identification of an appropriately sensitive and specific cut-point.
Addict Behav. 2013 Oct; 38(10):2547-50.AB

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Measurement of carbon monoxide in expired air samples (ECO) is a non-invasive, cost-effective biochemical marker for smoking. Cut points of 6ppm-10ppm have been established, though appropriate cut-points for pregnant woman have been debated due to metabolic changes. This study assessed whether an ECO cut-point identifying at least 90% of pregnant smokers, and misidentifying fewer than 10% of non-smokers, could be established.

METHODS

Pregnant women (N=167) completed a validated self-report smoking assessment, a urine drug screen for cotinine (UDS), and provided an expired air sample twice during pregnancy.

RESULTS

Half of women reported non-smoking status early (51%) and late (53%) in pregnancy, confirmed by UDS. Using a traditional 8ppm+cut-point for the early pregnancy reading, only 1% of non-smokers were incorrectly identified as smokers, but only 56% of all smokers, and 67% who smoked 5+ cigarettes in the previous 24h, were identified. However, at 4ppm+, only 8% of non-smokers were misclassified as smokers, and 90% of all smokers and 96% who smoked 5+ cigarettes in the previous 24h were identified. False positives were explained by heavy second hand smoke exposure and marijuana use. Results were similar for late pregnancy ECO, with ROC analysis revealing an area under the curve of .95 for early pregnancy, and .94 for late pregnancy readings.

CONCLUSIONS

A lower 4ppm ECO cut-point may be necessary to identify pregnant smokers using expired air samples, and this cut-point appears valid throughout pregnancy. Work is ongoing to validate findings in larger samples, but it appears if an appropriate cut-point is used, ECO is a valid method for determining smoking status in pregnancy.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Family Medicine, East Tennessee State University, P.O. Box 70621, Johnson City, TN 37614, United States. nordstro@etsu.edu

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

23793041

Citation

Bailey, Beth A.. "Using Expired Air Carbon Monoxide to Determine Smoking Status During Pregnancy: Preliminary Identification of an Appropriately Sensitive and Specific Cut-point." Addictive Behaviors, vol. 38, no. 10, 2013, pp. 2547-50.
Bailey BA. Using expired air carbon monoxide to determine smoking status during pregnancy: preliminary identification of an appropriately sensitive and specific cut-point. Addict Behav. 2013;38(10):2547-50.
Bailey, B. A. (2013). Using expired air carbon monoxide to determine smoking status during pregnancy: preliminary identification of an appropriately sensitive and specific cut-point. Addictive Behaviors, 38(10), 2547-50. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.addbeh.2013.05.011
Bailey BA. Using Expired Air Carbon Monoxide to Determine Smoking Status During Pregnancy: Preliminary Identification of an Appropriately Sensitive and Specific Cut-point. Addict Behav. 2013;38(10):2547-50. PubMed PMID: 23793041.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Using expired air carbon monoxide to determine smoking status during pregnancy: preliminary identification of an appropriately sensitive and specific cut-point. A1 - Bailey,Beth A, Y1 - 2013/05/23/ PY - 2013/01/04/received PY - 2013/05/03/revised PY - 2013/05/16/accepted PY - 2013/6/25/entrez PY - 2013/6/25/pubmed PY - 2013/10/30/medline KW - Biochemical verification of smoking KW - CO KW - COHb KW - ECO KW - ETS KW - Exhaled air carbon monoxide KW - NPV KW - PPV KW - Pregnancy smoking KW - ROC KW - Smoking assessment KW - UDS KW - carbon monoxide KW - carboxyhaemoglobin KW - environmental tobacco exposure KW - expired carbon monoxide KW - negative predictive value KW - parts per million KW - positive predictive value KW - ppm KW - receiver operating characteristic KW - urine drug screen SP - 2547 EP - 50 JF - Addictive behaviors JO - Addict Behav VL - 38 IS - 10 N2 - BACKGROUND: Measurement of carbon monoxide in expired air samples (ECO) is a non-invasive, cost-effective biochemical marker for smoking. Cut points of 6ppm-10ppm have been established, though appropriate cut-points for pregnant woman have been debated due to metabolic changes. This study assessed whether an ECO cut-point identifying at least 90% of pregnant smokers, and misidentifying fewer than 10% of non-smokers, could be established. METHODS: Pregnant women (N=167) completed a validated self-report smoking assessment, a urine drug screen for cotinine (UDS), and provided an expired air sample twice during pregnancy. RESULTS: Half of women reported non-smoking status early (51%) and late (53%) in pregnancy, confirmed by UDS. Using a traditional 8ppm+cut-point for the early pregnancy reading, only 1% of non-smokers were incorrectly identified as smokers, but only 56% of all smokers, and 67% who smoked 5+ cigarettes in the previous 24h, were identified. However, at 4ppm+, only 8% of non-smokers were misclassified as smokers, and 90% of all smokers and 96% who smoked 5+ cigarettes in the previous 24h were identified. False positives were explained by heavy second hand smoke exposure and marijuana use. Results were similar for late pregnancy ECO, with ROC analysis revealing an area under the curve of .95 for early pregnancy, and .94 for late pregnancy readings. CONCLUSIONS: A lower 4ppm ECO cut-point may be necessary to identify pregnant smokers using expired air samples, and this cut-point appears valid throughout pregnancy. Work is ongoing to validate findings in larger samples, but it appears if an appropriate cut-point is used, ECO is a valid method for determining smoking status in pregnancy. SN - 1873-6327 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/23793041/Using_expired_air_carbon_monoxide_to_determine_smoking_status_during_pregnancy:_preliminary_identification_of_an_appropriately_sensitive_and_specific_cut_point_ L2 - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0306-4603(13)00144-5 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -