## Abstract In a national caseโcontrol study, 891 New Zealand women aged 25 to 54 with newly diagnosed breast cancer were compared With 1,864 control subjects selected at random from the electoral rolls. The relative risk of breast cancer for current drinkers of alcohol, compared with women who had
Alcohol consumption and lung cancer in White males
โ Scribed by Elisa V. Bandera; Jo L. Freudenheim; Saxon Graham; James R. Marshall; Brenda P. Haughey; Mya Swanson; John Brasure; Gregg Wilkinson
- Publisher
- Springer Netherlands
- Year
- 1992
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 877 KB
- Volume
- 3
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0957-5243
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Experimental and epidemiologic investigations in alcoholic and nonalcoholic populations have suggested a role of alcohol in lung carcinogenesis. The association between alcohol consumption and lung cancer was investigated among 280 White males with histologically confirmed, primary lung cancer and 564 White male controls, participants in the Western New York Diet Study (United States). Among heavy smokers (over 40 pack-years), total alcohol consumption was associated with an increased risk of lung cancer with adjustment for age, years of education, pack-years of cigarette smoking, and intake of carotenoids and fat. In this group, the odds ratio for drinkers of more than 24 drinks per month was 1.6 compared with those who drank less. Drinkers of more than 12 beers per month were 1.6 times more likely to develop lung cancer than nondrinkers of beer after controlling for age, years of education, and cigarette smoking (95 percent confidence interval = 1.0-2.4, P for trend =0.003). Occupational and dietary factors did not seem to explain these findings. Although cigarette smoking is the major cause of lung cancer, the role of alcohol, independent or in interaction with cigarette smoking, deserves further investigation.
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In a population-based case-control study conducted in Adelaide, South Australia, and involving 451 case-control pairs aged 20-74 years, the risk of breast cancer for women con. suming more than 9.3 g of alcohol per day was 50% higher than for non-drinkers (unadjusted RR 1.46, 95% CI 1.00-2.13). The
## Abstract We examined the association between physical activity and lung cancer in a prospective cohort of 27,087 male smokers, ages 50โ69 years, enrolled in the AlphaโTocopherol, Beta Carotene Cancer Prevention (ATBC) Study. After an average of 10 years of followโup, 1,442 lung cancer cases were
## Abstract The role of alcohol intake in the etiology of endometrial cancer is unclear. We examined the impact of alcohol intake on endometrial cancer risk among 41,574 postmenopausal AfricanโAmerican, JapaneseโAmerican, Latina, NativeโHawaiian and White women recruited to the prospective Multieth