Multistage carcinogenesis and lung cancer mortality in three cohorts

Date

2005

Authors

Hazelton, William D
Clements, Mark
Moolgavkar, Suresh

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

American Association for Cancer Research

Abstract

Experimental evidence indicates that tobacco smoke acts both as an initiator and a promoter in lung carcinogenesis. We used the two-stage clonal expansion model incorporating the ideas of initiation, promotion, and malignant conversion to analyze lung cancer mortality in three large cohorts, the British Doctors' cohort and the two American Cancer Society cohorts, to determine how smoking habits influence age-specific lung cancer rates via these mechanisms. Likelihood ratio tests indicate that smoking-related promotion is the dominant model mechanism associated with lung cancer mortality in all cohorts. Smoking-related initiation is less important than promotion but interacts synergistically with it. Although no information on ex-smokers is available in these data, the model with estimated variables can be used to project risks among ex-smokers. These projected risks are in good agreement with the risk among ex-smokers derived from other studies. We present 10-year projected risks for current and former smokers adjusted for competing causes of mortality. The importance of smoking duration on lung cancer risk in these cohorts is a direct consequence of promotion. Intervention and treatment strategies should focus on promotion as the primary etiologic mechanism in lung carcinogenesis.

Description

Keywords

Keywords: tobacco smoke; article; cancer growth; cancer incidence; cancer mortality; cancer risk; cohort analysis; female; human; lung cancer; lung carcinogenesis; major clinical study; male; malignant transformation; priority journal; risk assessment; smoking habi

Citation

Source

Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers and Prevention

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2037-12-31