Radiation and Smoking Effects on Lung Cancer Incidence by Histological Types Among Atomic Bomb Survivors

被引:41
作者
Egawa, Hiromi [1 ]
Furukawa, Kyoji [2 ,3 ]
Preston, Dale
Funamoto, Sachiyo [2 ,3 ]
Yonehara, Shuji [4 ]
Matsuo, Takeshi
Tokuoka, Shoji [2 ,3 ]
Suyama, Akihiko [2 ,3 ]
Ozasa, Kotaro [2 ,3 ]
Kodama, Kazunori [2 ,3 ]
Mabuchi, Kiyohiko [5 ]
机构
[1] Hiroshima City Asa Hosp, Hiroshima, Japan
[2] Radiat Effects Res Fdn, Hiroshima, Japan
[3] Radiat Effects Res Fdn, Nagasaki, Japan
[4] Welf Assoc Onomichi Gen Hosp, Tokyo, Japan
[5] NCI, Div Canc Epidemiol & Genet, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA
关键词
CIGARETTE-SMOKING; RESIDENTIAL RADON; NEVER-SMOKERS; JAPANESE MEN; RISK; EXPOSURE; TRENDS; WOMEN; ADENOCARCINOMA; AMERICAN;
D O I
10.1667/RR2819.1
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
While the risk of lung cancer associated separately with smoking and radiation exposure has been widely reported, it is not clear how smoking and radiation together contribute to the risk of specific lung cancer histological types. With individual smoking histories and radiation dose estimates, we characterized the joint effects of radiation and smoking on type-specific lung cancer rates among the Life Span Study cohort of Japanese atomic bomb survivors. Among 105,404 cohort subjects followed between 1958 and 1999, 1,803 first primary lung cancer incident cases were diagnosed and classified by histological type. Poisson regression methods were used to estimate excess relative risks under several interaction models. Adenocarcinoma (636 cases), squamous-cell carcinoma (330) and small-cell carcinoma (194) made up 90% of the cases with known histology. Both smoking and radiation exposure significantly increased the risk of each major lung cancer histological type. Smoking-associated excess relative risks were significantly larger for small-cell and squamous-cell carcinomas than for adenocarcinoma. The gender-averaged excess relative risks per 1 Gy of radiation (for never-smokers at age 70 after radiation exposure at age 30) were estimated as 1.49 (95% confidence interval 0.1-4.6) for small-cell carcinoma, 0.75 (0.3-1.3) for adenocarcinoma, and 0.27 (0-1.5) for squamous-cell carcinoma. Under a model allowing radiation effects to vary with levels of smoking, the nature of the joint effect of smoking and radiation showed a similar pattern for different histological types in which the radiation-associated excess relative risk tended to be larger for moderate smokers than for heavy smokers. However, in contrast to analyses of all lung cancers as a group, such complicated interactions did not describe the data significantly better than either simple additive or multiplicative interaction models for any of the type-specific analyses. (C) 2012 by Radiation Research Society
引用
收藏
页码:191 / 201
页数:11
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