Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byBarrie Caldwell Modified over 8 years ago
1
Reducing Tobacco Intake Lowers Risk of Lung Cancer in Heavy Smokers Slideset on: Godtfredsen NS, Prescott E, Osler M. Effect of smoking reduction on lung cancer risk. JAMA. 2005;294:1505-1510.
2
clinicaloptions.com/onco Oncology Journal Options Godtfredsen NS, et al. JAMA. 2005;294:1505-1510. Background and Rationale Tobacco implicated in ~ 90% of lung cancer cases, making tobacco-related lung cancer the leading cause of cancer death worldwide Reducing number of cigarettes smoked per day may decrease tobacco-related harm –Data unclear as to whether reduction in harm affects morbidity or mortality Present study examined effect of smoking reduction on incidence of lung cancer
3
clinicaloptions.com/onco Oncology Journal Options Godtfredsen NS, et al. JAMA. 2005;294:1505-1510. Summary of Study Design Retrospective review of pooled data from 3 large, longitudinal population studies in Denmark –Mean follow-up: 18 years Primary outcome: number of primary lung cancer cases on follow-up 2 consecutive examinations –Follow-up examination performed within 5-10 years of baseline examination –Examinations conducted between 1964 and 1988
4
clinicaloptions.com/onco Oncology Journal Options Godtfredsen NS, et al. JAMA. 2005;294:1505-1510. Summary of Study Design (cont’d) Patients categorized by smoking status –Continued heavy smokers (≥ 15 g/day) –Reducers (≥ 15 g/day at baseline; ≥ 50% reduction at second examination) –Continued light smokers (1-14 g/day) –Exsmokers (no tobacco use at second examination) –Never smokers (no tobacco use at first or second examination)
5
clinicaloptions.com/onco Oncology Journal Options Godtfredsen NS, et al. JAMA. 2005;294:1505-1510. Baseline Characteristics Significant differences found between heavy smokers and reducers for all parameters assessed *P value indicates difference between heavy smokers and reducers Parameter Heavy Smokers (n = 7351) Reducers (n = 832) Never Smokers (n = 4006) P Value* Mean age, yrs52.455.154.5<.001 Men, n (%)4896 (66.6)600 (72.1)1351 (33.7).001 Mean tobacco consumption, g/day At baseline At follow-up 19.8 20.2 22.2 8.5 0000.001 <.001 Mean pack-years at baseline 31.227.10<.001 Lung cancer cases, n (%)576 (7.8)52 (6.3)28 (0.07)
6
clinicaloptions.com/onco Oncology Journal Options Godtfredsen NS, et al. JAMA. 2005;294:1505-1510. Main Findings Reductions in lung cancer risk seen for all populations relative to continued heavy smokers at 2nd observation GroupCrude Hazard Ratio (95% CI)Adjusted Hazard Ratio (95% CI) Heavy smokers1.00 Reducers0.68 (0.50-0.91)0.73 (0.54-0.98) Light smokers0.40 (0.32-0.50)0.44 (0.35-0.56) Quitters0.36 (0.27-0.49)0.50 (0.36-0.69) Exsmokers0.17 (0.13-0.23) Never smokers0.09 (0.06-0.13) CI, confidence interval
7
clinicaloptions.com/onco Oncology Journal Options Godtfredsen NS, et al. JAMA. 2005;294:1505-1510. Main Findings Further analyses to compensate for potentially confounding factors did not change findings –Analysis with omission of first 2 years after follow-up –Analysis with omission of participants reporting chronic respiratory conditions or lung disease –Analyses of cigarette smokers only Independent risk factors for lung cancer according to multivariate analysis included male sex, longer smoking duration, and smoke inhalation
8
clinicaloptions.com/onco Oncology Journal Options Godtfredsen NS, et al. JAMA. 2005;294:1505-1510. Main Findings Lung cancer types among current smokers evenly distributed Tendency toward larger small-cell lung cancer proportion with greater tobacco exposure Histologic subtypes –Squamous cell carcinoma: 229 cases –Adenocarcinoma: 234 cases –Small-cell lung cancer: 179 cases –Histology not specified: 222 cases
9
clinicaloptions.com/onco Oncology Journal Options Godtfredsen NS, et al. JAMA. 2005;294:1505-1510. Key Conclusions Among heavy smokers, cutting tobacco consumption by ≥ 50% associated with 27% decrease in lung cancer risk Lung cancer risk considerably lower among light smokers and participants who quit smoking during study Reduction in risk may be disproportionately smaller than corresponding reduction in smoking
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.