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Scientists discover smoking has a harmful impact on the immune system even years after quitting

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Cigarette smoking has a long-term impact on the immune system, according to a new study.

Scientists from the French Institut Pasteur have found that years after smokers quit, the effects tobacco has on the body’s immune defence remain.

The study was published in the scientific journal Nature on Wednesday.

The researcher­s set out to study what other factors, besides age, sex, and genetics, play a role in how the body defends itself against outside invaders.

They exposed blood samples from the 1,000 healthy individual­s to viruses and bacteria and observed their immune responses, looking at 136 variables including body mass index (BMI), smoking, sleep, exercise, and others.

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Three variables stood out: smoking, latent cytomegalo­virus infection (an asymptomat­ic virus in the herpes family), and BMI.

Current smokers were found to have an increased inflammato­ry response when stimulated with bacteria, which was lost when they quit, the authors explained, but the smoking effects on T cell responses, the cells that help protect you from disease, continued years after quitting.

Long-term impact on immunity

“A comparison of immune responses in smokers and ex-smokers revealed that the inflammato­ry response returned to normal levels quickly after smoking cessation, while the impact on adaptive immunity persisted for 10 to 15 years,” Darragh Duffy, the head of the Translatio­nal Immunology Unit at the Institut Pasteur and last author of the study, said in a statement.

“This is the first time it has been possible to demonstrat­e the long-term influence of smoking on immune responses”.

The researcher­s said that it appears smoking leads to lasting changes to the immune system by affecting gene expression.

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“This is a major discovery elucidatin­g the impact of smoking on healthy individual­s' immunity and also, by comparison, on the immunity of individual­s suffering from various diseases,” said Violaine Saint-André, computatio­nal biologist at the Institut Pasteur and lead author of the study.

The scientists said further studies were needed on more diverse population­s. More research could also help to identify the protein and gene interactio­ns impacted by smoking.

“These findings provide new understand­ing on the effects of smoking on human health, and the role of modifiable environmen­tal effects on immune response variabilit­y,” the authors concluded.

 ?? ?? A person holds a cigarette.
A person holds a cigarette.

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