» Articles » PMID: 8014103

Case-control Study for Lung Cancer and Cigarette Smoking in Osaka, Japan: Comparison with the Results from Western Europe

Overview
Specialty Oncology
Date 1994 May 1
PMID 8014103
Citations 14
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

In order to clarify the relation between cigarette smoking and lung cancer, a case-control study was conducted. The case series consisted of 1,376 lung cancer patients (1,082 males and 294 females) who were newly diagnosed and admitted to eight hospitals in Osaka during 1986-88. Smoking histories were compared with those of 2,230 controls (1,141 males and 1,089 females) admitted to the same hospitals during the same period without established smoking-related diseases. Odds ratios of current smoker versus nonsmoker were 18.1, 1.9, 21.4, and 3.8 for squamous, adeno, small, and large cell carcinoma, respectively, for males, and 9.7, 1.3, 12.1, 3.7, respectively, for females. Compared to the results from previous studies in Japan, the magnitude of the odds ratios for squamous and small cell carcinoma is approaching the level of Western Europe in the late 1970s. Population attributable risk of exsmokers has also been increasing to the level of Western Europe. Among male current smokers, smoking intensity, such as number of cigarettes per day or fraction smoked per cigarette, seemed to have a slightly greater influence on squamous cell carcinoma than adenocarcinoma, while factors associated with the spread of cigarette smoke, such as inhalation, seemed to have greater influence on adenocarcinoma. The difference in the distribution of these smoking characteristics between Japan and Western Europe could not fully explain the difference in lung cancer incidence and distribution of histologic types between the two areas.

Citing Articles

GLUT1 and PKM2 may be useful prognostic predictors in patients with non‑small cell lung cancer following curative R0 resection.

Ito R, Yashiro M, Tsukioka T, Izumi N, Komatsu H, Inoue H Oncol Lett. 2023; 25(3):129.

PMID: 36844619 PMC: 9950336. DOI: 10.3892/ol.2023.13715.


Small-cell lung cancer from the peripheral lung is frequently accompanied by emphysema and interstitial lung disease in the background.

Ikematsu Y, Izumi M, Takayama K, Kumazoe H, Wakamatsu K, Kawasaki M Thorac Cancer. 2022; 13(18):2616-2623.

PMID: 35906784 PMC: 9475230. DOI: 10.1111/1759-7714.14598.


The relationship of cigarette smoking in Japan to lung cancer, COPD, ischemic heart disease and stroke: A systematic review.

Lee P, Forey B, Thornton A, Coombs K F1000Res. 2019; 7:204.

PMID: 30800285 PMC: 6367657. DOI: 10.12688/f1000research.14002.1.


Distinct Characteristics of Small Cell Lung Cancer Correlate With Central or Peripheral Origin: Subtyping Based on Location and Expression of Transcription Factor TTF-1.

Miyauchi E, Motoi N, Ono H, Ninomiya H, Ohyanagi F, Nishio M Medicine (Baltimore). 2015; 94(51):e2324.

PMID: 26705222 PMC: 4697988. DOI: 10.1097/MD.0000000000002324.


Molecular epidemiology of lung cancer and geographic variations with special reference to EGFR mutations.

Mitsudomi T Transl Lung Cancer Res. 2015; 3(4):205-11.

PMID: 25806302 PMC: 4367697. DOI: 10.3978/j.issn.2218-6751.2014.08.04.


References
1.
Nakachi K, Imai K, Hayashi S, Watanabe J, Kawajiri K . Genetic susceptibility to squamous cell carcinoma of the lung in relation to cigarette smoking dose. Cancer Res. 1991; 51(19):5177-80. View

2.
Mizuno S, Akiba S, Hirayama T . Lung cancer risk comparison among male smokers between the "six-prefecture cohort" in Japan and the British physicians' cohort. Jpn J Cancer Res. 1989; 80(12):1165-70. PMC: 5917925. DOI: 10.1111/j.1349-7006.1989.tb01649.x. View

3.
McLaughlin J, HRUBEC Z, Blot W, Fraumeni Jr J . Stomach cancer and cigarette smoking among U.S. veterans, 1954-1980. Cancer Res. 1990; 50(12):3804. View

4.
Suzuki T, Sobue T, Fujimoto I, Doi O, Tateishi R . Association of adenocarcinoma of the lung with cigarette smoking by grade of differentiation and subtype. Cancer Res. 1990; 50(2):444-7. View

5.
Halpern M, Gillespie B, Warner K . Patterns of absolute risk of lung cancer mortality in former smokers. J Natl Cancer Inst. 1993; 85(6):457-64. DOI: 10.1093/jnci/85.6.457. View