Serum cotinine concentration and self-reported smoking during pregnancy

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Abstract

Although during pregnancy there is a better correlation between maternal serum cotinine concentration and adverse outcome than between self-reported smoking and such an outcome, few studies of pregnancy have measured cotinine concentration to determine how much a woman smokes. This study assessed the accuracy of self-reported smoking during pregnancy by performing serum cotinine assays on 448 women registered in the Collaborative Perinatal Project (1959-1966). Based on the assumption that a serum cotinine concentration of >10 ng/ml represented active smoking, 94.9% of women who denied smoking and 87.0% of women who stated that they smoked (kappa = 0.83) reported their status accurately. Among smokers, the correlation coefficient between cotinine concentration and number of cigarettes smoked per day was 0.44. Serum cotinine concentration correlated more strongly than self- reported smoking with infant birth weight (r = 0.246 vs. 0.200). In conclusion, this study showed that pregnant women accurately reported whether they smoked, but cotinine concentration was a better measure than self- report of the actual tobacco dose received.

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Klebanoff, M. A., Levine, R. J., Clemens, J. D., Dersimonian, R., & Wilkins, D. G. (1998). Serum cotinine concentration and self-reported smoking during pregnancy. American Journal of Epidemiology, 148(3), 259–262. https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a009633

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