Tobacco Related Cancers Philip C. Nasca, MS, PhD, FACE State University of New York At Albany School of Public Health.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
“The Effects of Tobacco use” Lesson 1
Advertisements

Deriving Biological Inferences From Epidemiologic Studies.
Causality Inferences. Objectives: 1. To understand the concept of risk factors and outcome in a scientific way. 2. To understand and comprehend each and.
The chemicals in all tobacco products harm the body.
What Tobacco Does to Your Body The Facts about tobacco – 4,000 Chemicals in one Puff Almost all of them make the body unable to work the way it should.
Teens and Tobacco Most people who begin to smoke do so when they are in their teens FACT: 8 out of 10 people who try tobacco will become addicted to it!
In this chapter, you will Learn About… How the substances in tobacco affect the body. The illnesses that can damage the respiratory system. Why people.
Tobacco Use A SERIOUS HEALTH RISK!.
Tobacco Drugs and Alcohol Unit. Tobacco Processed from the leaves of tobacco plants. Tobacco is categorized into two main categories: ◦Smoked tobacco,
Epidemiology Kept Simple
Epidemiology & Critical Thinking D. Morse st Avenue Tel: Office Hours: 4:00-5:00 (M & W)
James M. Eddy Texas A&M University The Health Effects of Smoking.
 Identify the harmful ingredients in tobacco smoke and describe how tobacco affects the body.  Examine the dangers of using alcohol, short-term effects.
Psychiatric Comorbidity of Smoking and Nicotine Dependence: An Epidemiologic Perspective Naomi Breslau, Ph.D. Department of Epidemiology Michigan State.
© Copyright 2011, Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 10 Nicotine and Tobacco Use.
Tobacco Use. Cigarette Smoke Cigarettes Cigarettes Contain 43 known carcinogens Contain 43 known carcinogens Cyanide, formaldehyde, and arsenic Cyanide,
TOBACCO. SMOKING FACTS Each day in the U.S., approximately 3,900 kids aged try their first cigarette. (1,423,500/year) If current trends continue,
Tobacco Prevention. What Kills the Most Americans Every Year? Rank them in order from 1-10 AIDS Suicide Alcohol Fires Secondhand Smoke Heroin Tobacco.
Tobacco. According to the CDC… Worldwide, tobacco use causes more than 5 million deaths per year. 1 Current trends show that tobacco use will cause.
TOBACCO. What is it? An agricultural crop Also known as “chew” “dip” “smoke” Can be smoked, chewed, dipped and spit out Brown cut up leaves Main ingredient.
1.2 billion smokers globally 83% of global smokers (956 million) live in developing countries Prevalence rate (in 90s) MaleFemale Bangladesh4010 Turkey5926.
 2011 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Jonathan M. Samet, MD, MS Director, USC Institute for Global Health Professor and Flora L. Thornton.
Tobacco Lesson 38. Nicotine is a stimulant drug found in tobacco products, including cigarettes, clove cigarettes, cigars, chewing tobacco, pipe tobacco,
 Tobacco is an agricultural product, recognized as an addictive drug, processed from the fresh leaves of plants in the genus Nicotiana.  Its all natural.
Tobacco: The Harmful Effects. Introduction Recent statistics show that about 5 million people -which is 1 in 10 adults - die each year due to smoking:
Lung Cancer Molecular Pathology of Cancer Boot Camp January 4, 2012 Jennifer Rider, ScD.
 Smokeless tobacco products consist of tobacco or a tobacco blend that is chewed or sucked on rather than smoked. It is placed inside the mouth in one.
FORMS of TOBACCO. Cigarettes Smokeless tobacco (chewing tobacco, oral snuff) Pipes Cigars Clove cigarettes Bidis Hookah (waterpipe smoking) Image courtesy.
FORMS of TOBACCO This module focuses on different forms of tobacco that are available in the U.S.
Tobacco Nicotine –The addictive chemical in tobacco products –Is a stimulant Stimulant- drugs that increase the activity of the nervous system.
Tobacco Use. Cigarette Smoke Cigarettes Contain 4000 different chemicals Contain 43 known carcinogens Cyanide, formaldehyde, and arsenic Also contain.
What Kills the Most Americans Every Year?  Rank them in order from 1-10  AIDS  Suicide  Alcohol  Fires  Secondhand Smoke  Heroin  Tobacco  Homicide.
Ms. Bushong. Stains Teeth, gum disease, tooth loss Fingers turn yellow Ages and wrinkles skin Lung cancer, emphysema, hard to breathe High blood pressure,
 2012 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Joanna Cohen, PhD Director, Institute for Global Tobacco Control Bloomberg Professor of Disease.
What are the many “Costs” of Tobacco? Cost ($) of Tobacco On average, a pack of tobacco (cigarettes/smokeless tobacco) costs around $7.50 with tax. Most.
Tobacco. Carcinogen Any chemical or agent that causes cancer.
BELL WORK Today we start a new chapter, tobacco. What are some of the health risk you think you would have if you were to use tobacco.
Name:_________________________________ Day:____ Period: _____ Do you know how many people smoke or use smokeless tobacco? 1.35 billion people smoke worldwide.
 Tobacco is a product prepared from the leaves of the tobacco plant.  It is smoked in cigarettes, cigars, pipes and consumed as snuff, chewing tobacco.
Tobacco Chapter 11.
Smoking Notes…. Tobacco Fun Facts: #1 cause of preventable death More than 4,000 chemicals At least 70 are cancer causing Fresh, processed and smoke contains.
Choosing a Tobacco-Free Lifestyle
Tobacco. Nicotine is a stimulant drug found in tobacco products, including cigarettes, clove cigarettes, cigars, chewing tobacco, pipe tobacco, and snuff.
1. TAKE QUIZ ON ALCOHOL 2. TURN IN ALCOHOL QUIZ AND ALCOHOL PACK 3. WARM-UP WHAT ARE THE HARMFUL AFFECTS OF TOBACCO YOU KNOW ABOUT? WHAT CAN YOU DO TO.
Smoking Statistics toll_us/washington sheets/health_effects/tobacco_related_mortalityhttp://
Tobacco Smoking Smokless tobacco. Smoking Why teens start smoking
TOBACCO. What is it? Tobacco products are products made entirely or partly of leaf tobacco as raw material, which are intended to be smoked, sucked, chewed.
Bell ringer:. Smoke Smokeless Cigarettes Cigars Pipes.
Chapter 11 Tobacco. trailer.htm.
Warm Up Take a worksheet from the table, and think about the following questions… 1. When tobacco burns, what substance (liquid) is created? 2. What gas.
In this chapter, you will Learn About… How the substances in tobacco affect the body. The illnesses that can damage the respiratory system. Why people.
The chemicals in all tobacco products harm the body.
Warm-Up (write in composition books)
Tobacco.
Tobacco Use.
Substance Abuse Unit Lesson 4
Smoking.
Smoking Kills!!! Warning!! Warning!!.
Concepts of Fitness & Wellness 8e
Tobacco… What A High Risk Behavior Does To the Body Brenda Jean Yue-Jay Liu Shanika McCorvey Emerlie-Ann St.Ange.
Tobacco Objectives: Identify factors that influence teens’ decisions about tobacco use. Describe the various forms of tobacco. Identify three dangerous.
Chapter 24 Lesson 1 Notes Why young people start smoking
Tobacco Prevention.
Tobacco Kills More Americans Each Year Than Alcohol, Cocaine, Crack, Heroin, Homicide, Suicide, Car Accidents, Fires and AIDS combined:
Smoking.
Tobacco Lung Larynx Oral Cavity Esophagus Pancreas Bladder Kidney
Nicotine The average cigarette contains from 1 to 16 grams of nicotine.  When inhaled, nicotine enters the bloodstream, reaching the brain in less than.
Tobacco Review.
Chapter 8 Tobacco Lesson 1 How Tobacco Affects the Body Next >>
Tobacco and Alcohol Mrs. Wallace.
Presentation transcript:

Tobacco Related Cancers Philip C. Nasca, MS, PhD, FACE State University of New York At Albany School of Public Health

Annual Deaths Attributable to Cigarette Smoking – United States,

Assessing Causality A.Strength of Associations: There are mathematical techniques for measuring how strongly two variables are associated, to be discussed later in the course. Strong associations are more likely to be causal than weak associations; but the fact that an association is weak does not rule out a causal association B.Consistency: Repeated observation of an association in different populations, at different times, using different methodologies C.Biologic Credibility (Plausibility):An assessment of how credible the inference is, based on available biologic evidence

Assessing Causality D. Temporality (Time Sequence): The necessity that cause precede effect in time. This is a necessary part of causal inference, but sometimes temporal information is not available. E.Biologic Gradient (Dose-Response Relationship): The observation of a gradient of risk associated with the degree of exposure. F. Experimental Evidence: Strong, but such information is seldom available for human populations. Animal data are often used, e.g. to test if a particular substance may be carcinogenic and then these data are used by analogy, to support observational data that the substance is associated with cancer in humans.

Assessing Causality G. Coherence: Agreement between the hypothesized cause and the known facts of the natural history and biology of the disease. Very similar to “biologic credibility”. H. Analogy: A very weak criterion since an analogy with a different causal association may not pertain to the association in question. Good for hypothesis generation. I. Specificity: Of historic and pedagogic interest only. This criterion states that one cause should lead to a dingle, not multiple effects. This has been advanced by many others (Koch-Henle postulates of infectious disease), but, even with reservations, it appears obvious that single events/causes/exposures can have many effects.

Risks For Cancers of The Upper Digestive and Respiratory Tracts in Male Smokers Relative to That of Nonsmokers Who Drink Little of No Alcohol Example – Cancer of the Larynx Wynder et al. (1976)

Risks For Cancer of the Pancreas in Cigarette Smokers Relative to That For Nonsmokers – Wynder et al. (1983)

Risk for Cancer of the Hypolarynx/Epilarynx According to Daily Consumption of Tobacco and Alcohol – Tuyns et al (1988). Alcohol Consumption (g Ethanol/day) *Risk Relative To Those Who Consume 0-40g ethanol/day and 0-7 g tobacco/day

Table 15. Risks for cancer of the bladder of male cigarette smokers relative to those for nonsmokers - Examples CountryDaily No. of Cigarettes Relativ e Risk* Reference USANonsmokers1.0Wynder&Goldsmith (1977) >/=413.3 CANADANonsmokers1.0Howe et al. (1980) < >205.1 * Ratio between the occurrence rate of cancer among smokers and that among nonsmokers

Figure 7-7. Table of concentrations of selected compounds in nonfilter cigarette mainstream smoke (MS) and the ratio of their relative distribution in sidestream smoke (SS):MS* - Examples MSSS:MS Vapour Phase Carbon Monoxide10-23 mg Benzene12-48 ug10 Formaldehyde ug8-15 Particulate Phase Nicotine Naphthylamine1.7ng30 Benzopyrene

Range of Average Indoor Concentrations of Noteable ETS Contaminants Associated With Smoking Occupancy

Number of Exposures in the Past 4 Days Figure Urinary cotinine concentrations by number of reported exposures to tobacco smoke in the past 4 days among 663 nonsmokers, Buffalo, New York, 1986

Table Exposure Response Trends For Females – Smoking By Spouse StudyExposureRR*C.I Font (Years) (0.93, 1.89) (0.96,2.05) >301.43(0.99, 2.09) Font (Pack Years)1.0 0<151.03(0.73, 1.46) (0.85, 1.87) (0.98, 2.27) >/=801.70(0.82, 3.49)

Table Exposure Response Trends For Females – Smoking By Spouse StudyExposureRR*C.I Geng (Cig./Day) (1.1, 1.8) (1.4, 2.7) >/= (1.9, 4.1) Geng (Years)01.0 <201.49(1.15, 1.94) (1.54, 3.22) >/=403.32(2.11, 5.22)

HISTORY OF SMOKELESS TOBACCO Smokeless tobacco was used in the United States in the early 1600s when snuff made its way to the Jamestown Colony in Virginia through the efforts of John Rolfe in 1611 (1). Evidence of tobacco chewing, however, was not until a century later in 1704 (2).

A Chinese Law in 1683 Threatened That Anyone Possessing Tobacco Would Be Beheaded

HISTORY OF SMOKELESS TOBACCO In the past, tobacco use was considered by some as beneficial B.C. tobacco an article of value – Mexico and Peru Alleviation of hunger pains Medicinal Uses: In Native Americans – to alleviate toothaches, disinfect cuts and relieve the effects of snake, spider, and insect bites 19 th and 20 th centuries used to relieve toothache, to cure neuroglia, bleeding of gums, and scurvy To preserve and whiten teeth and prevent decay

CHEWING TOBACCO Looseleaf Plug Twist SNUFF Moist Dry

Does smokeless tobacco cause cancer? Smokeless tobacco is tobacco that is not burned. It includes chewing tobacco, dip, snuff, and betel quid*. At least 28 chemicals in these products have been found to cause cancer, including: Esophageal cancer Mouth cancer Pancreatic cancer Esophageal cancer Lip cancer Mouth cancer Pharynx cancer Tongue cancer *Betel quid is a combination of betel leaf, areca nut, and slaked lime. In many countries, tobacco is added, and the product is known as gutka, ghutka, or gutkha. Like other smokeless tobacco products, betel quid and gutka are known to cause various cancers

Table 9-3 Cancer sites for which there is “sufficient” evidence of carcinogenicity of tobacco smoking according to the International Agency for Research on cancer

Figure Unless current smokers quit, tobacco deaths will rise dramatically in the next 50 years IMPACT OF TOBACCO ON GLOBAL HEALTH