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Tobacco smoking and risks of more than 470 diseases in China: a prospective cohort study

Authors :
Ka Hung Chan
Neil Wright
Dan Xiao
Yu Guo
Yiping Chen
Huaidong Du
Ling Yang
Iona Y Millwood
Pei Pei
Junzheng Wang
Iain Turnbull
Simon Gilbert
Daniel Avery
Christiana Kartsonaki
Canqing Yu
Junshi Chen
Jun Lv
Robert Clarke
Rory Collins
Richard Peto
Liming Li
Chen Wang
Zhengming Chen
Derrick Bennett
Ruth Boxall
Sushila Burgess
Peter Ka Hung Chan
Johnathan Clarke
Ahmed Edris Mohamed
Hannah Fry
Mike Hill
Becky Pek Kei Im
Andri Iona
Maria Kakkoura
Hubert Lam
Kuang Lin
Mohsen Mazidi
Sam Morris
Qunhua Nie
Alfred Pozarickij
Paul Ryder
Saredo Said
Dan Schmidt
Paul Sherliker
Rebecca Stevens
Robin Walters
Lin Wang
Xiaoming Yang
Pang Yao
Xiao Han
Can Hou
Qingmei Xia
Chao Liu
Naying Chen
Duo Liu
Zhenzhu Tang
Ningyu Chen
Qilian Jiang
Jian Lan
Mingqiang Li
Yun Liu
Fanwen Meng
Jinhuai Meng
Rong Pan
Yulu Qin
Ping Wang
Sisi Wang
Liuping Wei
Liyuan Zhou
Caixia Dong
Pengfei Ge
Xiaolan Ren
Zhongxiao Li
Enke Mao
Tao Wang
Hui Zhang
Xi Zhang
Jinyan Chen
Ximin Hu
Xiaohuan Wang
Zhendong Guo
Huimei Li
Yilei Li
Min Weng
Shukuan Wu
Shichun Yan
Mingyuan Zou
Xue Zhou
Ziyan Guo
Quan Kang
Yanjie Li
Bo Yu
Qinai Xu
Liang Chang
Lei Fan
Shixian Feng
Ding Zhang
Gang Zhou
Yulian Gao
Tianyou He
Pan He
Chen Hu
Huarong Sun
Xukui Zhang
Biyun Chen
Zhongxi Fu
Yuelong Huang
Huilin Liu
Qiaohua Xu
Li Yin
Huajun Long
Xin Xu
Hao Zhang
Libo Zhang
Jian Su
Ran Tao
Ming Wu
Jie Yang
Jinyi Zhou
Yonglin Zhou
Yihe Hu
Yujie Hua
Jianrong Jin
Fang Liu
Jingchao Liu
Yan Lu
Liangcai Ma
Aiyu Tang
Jun Zhang
Liang Cheng
Ranran Du
Ruqin Gao
Feifei Li
Shanpeng Li
Yongmei Liu
Feng Ning
Zengchang Pang
Xiaohui Sun
Xiaocao Tian
Shaojie Wang
Yaoming Zhai
Hua Zhang
Wei Hou
Silu Lv
Xiaofang Chen
Xianping Wu
Ningmei Zhang
Weiwei Zhou
Jianguo Li
Jiaqiu Liu
Guojin Luo
Qiang Sun
Xunfu Zhong
Weiwei Gong
Ruying Hu
Hao Wang
Meng Wang
Min Yu
Lingli Chen
Qijun Gu
Dongxia Pan
Chunmei Wang
Kaixu Xie
Xiaoyi Zhang
group, China Kadoorie Biobank collaborative
Source :
The Lancet. Public health. 7(12)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Background Tobacco smoking is estimated to account for more than 1 million annual deaths in China, and the epidemic continues to increase in men. Large nationwide prospective studies linked to different health records can help to periodically assess disease burden attributed to smoking. We aimed to examine associations of smoking with incidence of and mortality from an extensive range of diseases in China. Methods We analysed data from the prospective China Kadoorie Biobank, which recruited 512 726 adults aged 30–79 years, of whom 210 201 were men and 302 525 were women. Participants who had no major disabilities were identified through local residential records in 100–150 administrative units, which were randomly selected by use of multistage cluster sampling, from each of the ten diverse study areas of China. They were invited and recruited between June 25, 2004, and July 15, 2008. Upon study entry, trained health workers administered a questionnaire assessing detailed smoking behaviours and other key characteristics (eg, sociodemographics, lifestyle, and medical history). Participants were followed up via electronic record linkages to death and disease registries and health insurance databases, from baseline to Jan 1, 2018. During a median 11-year follow-up (IQR 10–12), 285 542 (55·7%) participants were ever hospitalised, 48 869 (9·5%) died, and 5252 (1·0%) were lost to follow-up during the age-at-risk of 35–84 years. Cox regression yielded hazard ratios (HRs) associating smoking with disease incidence and mortality, adjusting for multiple testing. Findings At baseline, 74·3% of men and 3·2% of women (overall 32·4%) ever smoked regularly. During follow-up, 1 137 603 International Classification of Diseases, 10th revision (ICD-10)-coded incident events occurred, involving 476 distinct conditions and 85 causes of death, each with at least 100 cases. Compared with never-regular smokers, ever-regular smokers had significantly higher risks for nine of 18 ICD-10 chapters examined at age-at-risk of 35–84 years. For individual conditions, smokers had significantly higher risks of 56 diseases (50 for men and 24 for women) and 22 causes of death (17 for men and nine for women). Among men, ever-regular smokers had an HR of 1·09 (95% CI 1·08–1·11) for any disease incidence when compared with never-regular smokers, and significantly more episodes and longer duration of hospitalisation, particularly those due to cancer and respiratory diseases. For overall mortality, the HRs were greater in men from urban areas than in men from rural areas (1·50 [1·42–1·58] vs 1·25 [1·20–1·30]). Among men from urban areas who began smoking at younger than 18 years, the HRs were 2·06 (1·89–2·24) for overall mortality and 1·32 (1·27–1·37) for any disease incidence. In this population, 19·6% of male (24·3% of men residing in urban settings and 16·2% of men residing in rural settings) and 2·8% of female deaths were attributed to ever-regular smoking. Interpretation Among Chinese adults, smoking was associated with higher risks of morbidity and mortality from a wide range of diseases. Among men, the future smoking-attributed disease burden will increase further, highlighting a pressing need for reducing consumption through widespread cessation and uptake prevention. Funding British Heart Foundation, Cancer Research UK, Chinese Ministry of Science and Technology, Kadoorie Charitable Foundation, UK Medical Research Council, National Natural Science Foundation of China, Wellcome Trust.

Details

ISSN :
24682667
Volume :
7
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Lancet. Public health
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d72ce114c91bec84a7fcdd00486810dc