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Modeling the Complex Exposure History of Smoking in Predicting Bladder Cancer

Authors :
Angela Carta
Hermann Pohlabeln
Kenneth C. Johnson
Wei-De Zhong
Sylvia H J Jochems
Gunnar Steineck
James R. Marshall
Klaus Golka
Margaret R. Karagas
Eliane Kellen
Anke Wesselius
Jack A. Taylor
Stefano Porru
Carlo La Vecchia
Cristina Bosetti
Li Tang
Zuo-Feng Zhang
Mariana C. Stern
Jerry Polesel
Maurice P. Zeegers
Xuejuan Jiang
Frederik J. van Schooten
Frits H.M. van Osch
Richard T. Bryan
Jelle Vlaanderen
Promovendi NTM
RS: NUTRIM - R3 - Respiratory & Age-related Health
Genetica & Celbiologie
Farmacologie en Toxicologie
Complexe Genetica
RS: CAPHRI - R5 - Optimising Patient Care
Source :
Epidemiology, Epidemiology, 30(3), 458-465. LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS, Epidemiology (Cambridge, Mass.), vol 30, iss 3
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Background: Few studies have modeled smoking histories by combining smoking intensity and duration to show what profile of smoking behavior is associated with highest risk of bladder cancer. This study aims to provide insight into the association between smoking exposure history and bladder cancer risk by modeling both smoking intensity and duration in a pooled analysis.Methods: We used data from 15 case-control studies included in the bladder cancer epidemiology and nutritional determinants study, including a total of 6,874 cases and 17,727 controls. To jointly interpret the effects of intensity and duration of smoking, we modeled excess odds ratios per pack-year by intensity continuously to estimate the risk difference between smokers with long duration/low intensity and short duration/high intensity.Results: The pattern observed from the pooled excess odds ratios model indicated that for a fixed number of pack-years, smoking for a longer duration at lower intensity was more deleterious for bladder cancer risk than smoking more cigarettes/day for a shorter duration. We observed similar patterns within individual study samples.Conclusions: This pooled analysis shows that long duration/low intensity smoking is associated with a greater increase in bladder cancer risk than short duration/high intensity smoking within equal pack-year categories, thus confirming studies in other smoking-related cancers and demonstrating that reducing exposure history to a single metric such as pack-years was too restrictive.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10443983
Volume :
30
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Epidemiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b1e514a13386b7e74c17d4d436930374
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/ede.0000000000000964