The study presented at the Annual European Congress of Rheumatology (EULAR) in Spain confirmed the link between active smoking and the risk of developing rheumatoid arthritis (RA).
It also suggests for the first time that in smokers, exposure to tobacco early in life through passive smoking in childhood significantly increased this risk.
"Our study highlights the importance of avoiding any tobacco environment in children, especially in those with a family history of RA," said Professor Raphaele Seror from University Hospitals of South Paris in France.
A second study showed that smoking is associated with increased progression of structural damage to the spine in patients with ankylosing spondylitis (AS), a type of arthritis that affects the spine.
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To analyse the impact of active and passive smoking on the risk of developing RA, a large population of female volunteers born between 1925 and 1950 were prospectively followed since 1990.
Passive smoking exposure during childhood increased the association between RA risk and adult active smoking.
In contrast, the hazard ratio was 1.37 in active smokers not exposed to passive smoke during childhood.
In a separate analysis, previous chronic diarrhoea was associated with more than double the risk of RA (hazard ratio of 2.32), while chronic constipation or alternating between diarrhoea and constipation did not impact risk (hazard ratios of 1.16 and 1.07 respectively).
"An association between a history of chronic diarrhoea and the risk of developing RA supports the hypothesis of dysbiosis (a bacterial imbalance in the gut) as a risk factor for the emergence of immune-mediated inflammatory disease," said Seror, lead author of the study.
Out of 70,598 women, a total of 1,239 patients self- reported developing RA, of which 350 cases were eligible for analysis of the link to active and passive smoking, and 280 in the analysis of the link to a history of an intestinal transit disorder.