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Lifetime residential and workplace exposure to environmental tobacco smoke and lung cancer in never-smoking women, Canada 1994–97

✍ Scribed by Kenneth C. Johnson; Jinfu Hu; Yang Mao; The Canadian Cancer Registries Epidemiology Research Group


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2001
Tongue
French
Weight
58 KB
Volume
93
Category
Article
ISSN
0020-7136

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✦ Synopsis


Although the risk of lung cancer among never-smokers living with a spouse who smokes has been extensively studied, the impact of lifetime residential and workplace environmental tobacco smoke has received less attention. As part of a large population-based case-control study of lung cancer, we collected lifetime residential and occupational passive smoking information from 71 women with lung cancer and 761 healthy control subjects, all of whom reported being lifetime nonsmokers. The adjusted odds ratio (OR) for lung cancer associated with residential passive exposure only was 1.21 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.5-2.8). Although more years of and more intense residential passive smoke exposure tended to be associated with higher risk estimates, no clear dose-response relationship was evident. The OR for women with passive exposure as a child and as an adult was 1.63 (95% CI 0.8 -3.5) and for those only exposed as an adult 1.20 (95% CI 0.5-3.0). Exposure to environmental tobacco smoke was associated with an adjusted OR of 1.27 (95% CI 0.4 -4.0) only in the workplace. Risks associated with increasing occupational exposure year tertiles were 1.24, 1.71 and 1.71. Total smoker-years of residential and occupational exposure combined resulted in a statistically significant trend (linear test for trend p ‫؍‬ 0.05) with ORs for tertiles of exposure of 0.83, 1.54 and 1.82. Our results are consistent with the literature suggesting that long-term, regular exposure to either residential or occupational environmental tobacco smoke is associated with increased lung cancer risk in never-smoking women.


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