Title of article :
Lung cancer rates as an index of tobacco smoke exposures: validation against black malenot, vert, similarnon-lung cancer death rates, 1969–2000
Author/Authors :
Bruce Leistikow، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
Background. Researchers use lung cancer death rates (rates) as an index of the cumulative burdens of smoking. That index lacks direct validation and calibration. So this study directly validates and calibrates that index against annualnot, vert, similarnon-lung (all-sites minus lung and stomach) rates from 1969 to 2000 in United States black men, then estimates their cancer death rate smoking-attributable fractions (SAFs).
Methods. This study uses linear regression, age-adjusted rates from http://www.seer.cancer.gov/canques, and the formula SAF = (1− ((rate in the unexposed) / (rate in the exposed))). Estimated rates in the unexposed range between the 1969 rate and the rate predicted for a population with no smoking-attributable lung cancers. Stomach and lung cancer rate SAFs were based on published cohort studies.
Results. Lung cancer death rates predicted 98% and 97% of the variances innot, vert, similarnon-lung cancer death rates throughout their 1969–1990 34% rise and subsequent declines, respectively (each P < 0.0001). The findings suggest that the SAF of the all-sites cancer death rate in black men peaked at 66% in 1990.
Conclusions. Lung cancer death rates were a good index of smoke exposure for predictingnot, vert, similarnon-lung cancer death rates in black men. Smoking may cause most premature cancer deaths in black men.
Keywords :
Male , Neoplams , smoking , United States , time series , blacks
Journal title :
Preventive Medicine
Journal title :
Preventive Medicine