## BACKGROUND. Familial factors are suggested to play roles in lung carcinogenesis, but may well be different for each histologic cell type. ## METHODS. Information regarding smoking, past medical history, and family history of malignant diseases among first-degree relatives was collected from
Histologic types of lung carcinoma and age at onset
✍ Scribed by Michaela Kreuzer; Lothar Kreienbrock; Klaus M. Müller; Michael Gerken; Erich Wichmann
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 125 KB
- Volume
- 85
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0008-543X
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
BACKGROUND.
Previous research has demonstrated that adenocarcinoma is the leading cell type among patients with early age onset lung carcinoma. An increase in adenocarcinoma at the expense of squamous cell carcinoma in general was observed in recent years and may be due to the smoking of filtered cigarettes.
METHODS.
To rule out whether shifts in smoking patterns or other etiologic factors are responsible for the high rates of adenocarcinoma in young patients, personal interviews regarding smoking, occupation, and family history of cancer were conducted in 251 young patients (age Յ 45 years) and 2009 older patients (ages 55-69 years) with histologically confirmed lung carcinoma from selected study clinics in Germany between 1990 and 1996.
RESULTS.
Young male patients were found to have significantly more adenocarcinomas (41%) than older male patients (28%), whereas adenocarcinomas were dominant in young and older women (43% and 47%, respectively). Because smoking patterns were different between young and older patients, the authors stratified for comparable levels of smoking exposure. Histology did not differ in never smokers (dominance of adenocarcinomas in both age groups) and in male heavy smokers (dominance of squamous cell carcinomas in both age groups), whereas young male low dose smokers showed significantly more cases of adenocarcinoma than older low dose smokers. A family history of lung carcinoma was significantly higher in young patients compared with older patients, but no association with histologic type was observed.
CONCLUSIONS.
The results of the current study show that differences in the histologic type of lung carcinoma based on age at onset can be explained in part by differences in smoking patterns. However, there still are unknown factors that appear to favor the development of adenocarcinoma in the young.
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