The Future Colorectal Cancer Burden Attributable to Modifiable Behaviors: A Pooled Cohort Study
Date
Authors
Vajdic, Claire M.
MacInnis, Robert
Canfell, Karen
Hull, Peter
Arriaga, Maria E.
Hirani, Vasant
Cumming, Robert
Mitchell, Paul
Byles, Julie
Giles, Graham G.
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Oxford University Press
Abstract
Background: Previous estimates of the colorectal cancer (CRC) burden attributed to behaviors have not considered joint
effects, competing risk, or population subgroup differences.
Methods: We pooled data from seven prospective Australian cohort studies (n ¼ 367 058) and linked them to national
registries to identify CRCs and deaths. We estimated the strength of the associations between behaviors and CRC risk using a
parametric piecewise constant hazards model, adjusting for age, sex, study, and other behaviors. Exposure prevalence was
estimated from contemporary National Health Surveys. We calculated population attributable fractions for CRC preventable
by changes to current behaviors, accounting for competing risk of death and risk factor interdependence. Statistical tests
were two-sided.
Results: During the first 10 years of follow-up, there were 3471 incident CRCs. Overweight or obesity explained 11.1%, ever
smoking explained 10.7% (current smoking 3.9%), and drinking more than two compared with two or fewer alcoholic drinks
per day explained 5.8% of the CRC burden. Jointly, these factors were responsible for 24.9% (95% confidence interval [CI] ¼
19.7% to 29.9%) of the burden, higher for men (36.7%) than women (13.2%, Pdifference < .001). The burden attributed to these factors was also higher for those born in Australia (28.7%) than elsewhere (16.8%, Pdifference ¼ .047). We observed modification of
the smoking-attributable burden by alcohol consumption and educational attainment, and modification of the obesity-attributable burden by age group and birthplace.
Conclusions: We produced up-to-date estimates of the future CRC burden attributed to modifiable behaviors. We revealed
novel differences between men and women, and other high–CRC burden subgroups that could potentially benefit most from
programs that support behavioral change and early detection.
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Journal of the National Cancer Institute
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Open Access
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Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License
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