Dear Editor,

The letter to the Editor of Lippi and Henry1 published in the European Journal of Internal Medicine and entitled ‘Active smoking is not associated with severity of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)’ had errors and led to the wrong conclusion.

Lippi and Henry1 searched PubMed and Web of Science up to 9 March 2020, and identified 5 studies2-2 with data on smoking and severity of COVID-19. They performed a meta-analysis revealing a pooled OR of 1.69 (95% CI: 0.41–6.92) and concluded that active smoking does not seem to be significantly associated with enhanced risk of progressing towards severe disease in COVID-19. There were several mistakes in their data collection that led to errors in the meta-analysis. In table 1 of their letter, they indicated the outcome of Guan et al. study2 to be ‘Admission to ICU, mechanical ventilation, death’, however, they used the data of ‘severe disease’ in the study. According to the Guan et al.2 paper, the number of patients having composite outcome should be 66, and for patients not having a composite outcome should be 1019. However, Lippi and Henry1 used 172 and 913, respectively, in their paper. This is the most serious mistake because the Guan et al.1 study contributes to most of the cases in the meta-analysis. Moreover, the non-severe patients in the Huang et al.3 study should be 28 and not 31. The non-severe patients in the Yang et al.5 study should be 20 and not 18. The severe patients in the Zhang et al.6 should be 58 and not 60. The errors led to the wrong sample size of these 3 studies as well. Lippi and Henry1 were only correct in one4 out of the 5 studies.

I performed an updated meta-analysis according to the correct data using RevMan Ver. 5.3, and provide the forest plot (Figure 1). The pooled OR was 2.20 (95% CI: 1.31–3.67; p=0.003). The heterogeneity was moderate (I>=57%). There was no obvious publication bias by the funnel plot. Though there are new studies published after the Lippi and Henry1 paper, the purpose of this letter is to correct their errors, therefore new studies are not included in the updated meta-analysis.

Figure 1

Forest plot of the updated meta-analysis

https://www.tobaccoinduceddiseases.org/f/fulltexts/121915/TID-18-37-g001_min.jpg

In a systemic review published by Vardavas and Nikitara7, 5 studies were included. Though meta-analysis was not performed in that study, the authors concluded that smoking is most likely associated with the negative progression and adverse outcomes of COVID-19. A recent meta-analysis including 7 studies also revealed that smokers have a double risk of severe COVID-19 (pooled OR=1.98; 95% CI: 1.29–3.05)8. A meta-analysis published in 2019 including 27 studies and 460592 participants revealed current smokers (pooled OR=2.17; 95% CI: 1.70–2.76) and ex-smokers (pooled OR=1.49; 95% CI: 1.26–1.75) were more likely to develop community-acquired pneumonia compared to never smokers9. The evidence suggests that smokers are more vulnerable to lung infection, and COVID-19 is no exception.

In conclusion, the results of this updated meta-analysis suggest that active smoking is significantly associated with the risk of severe COVID-19. Though more data are available now, they are not included in this study. However, the early meta-analysis of the Lippi and Henry1 paper should have had different results.