Women who smoke cigarettes are more likely to develop heart disease than men who smoke, with the risk for women increasing every year that they smoke, according to a study.

The authors, led by Rachel Huxley of the University of Minnesota, reviewed studies published between 1966 and 2010 on 2.4 million people, including 44,000 cardiac events.

They found female smokers to have a 25 percent greater risk for coronary heart disease than male smokers -- and the difference in risk for male and female smokers increased by 2 percent for each year they smoke.

"Prevalence of smoking is increasing in women in some populations and is a risk factor for coronary heart disease," wrote Huxley and her colleagues in The Lancet. "Whether mechanisms underlying the sex difference in risk of coronary heart disease are biological or related to differences in smoking behavior between men and women is unclear. Tobacco control programs should consider women, particularly in those countries where smoking among young women is increasing."

A fifth of the world's 1.1 billion smokers are women, and an analysis released in March said millions of women in developing countries risked disease and death as their rising economic and political status leads them to smoke more.

"It hasn't been widely recognized that there had been this sex difference," Huxley said.

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Updated 28 minutes ago The big dig begins ... Latest on transportation woes ... Find out if your school is closed ... Today's forecast

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