A case-control study of oesophageal cancer was carried out in Trivandrum, Kerala, involving 267 cases and 895 controls. Risk factors studied in males were pan (betel)-tobacco chewing, bidi and cigarette smoking, drinking alcohol and taking snuff. Only pan-tobacco chewing was investigated in females
Tobacco and alcohol as risk factors in cancer of the larynx in Kerala, India
β Scribed by R. Sankaranarayanan; Stephen W. Duffy; M. Krishnan Nair; G. Padmakumary; Nicholas E. Day
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- French
- Weight
- 331 KB
- Volume
- 45
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0020-7136
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β¦ Synopsis
A case-control study of cancer of the larynx was carried out in Kerala, Southern India, on 191 male cancer cases and 549 male hospital-based controls. Risk factors investigated were pan(bete1)-tobacco chewing, bidi and cigarette smoking, drinking alcohol and inhaling snuff. Significant positive associations with risk were observed for bidi smoking (p < O.OOl), bidi and cigarette smoking (p < 0.001) and drinking alcohol (p < 0.001). A predisposing effect of smoking cigarettes alone approached significance (0. I < p < 0.05). What appeared to be an almost significant protective effect of pan-tobacco chewing (0.1 < p < 0.05) was found to be an artefact of confounding with smoking, and indeed a significant predisposing effect was observed of occasional chewing (p < 0.001). After a stepwise logistic regression to eliminate those factors which were not significant when adjusted for other factors, significant effects remained of durations of bidi smoking and cigarette smoking, daily frequency of bidi and cigarette smoking and duration of alcohol drinking. Relative risks of 7.12, 5.18 and 2.58 were observed for durations of more than 20 years of bidi smoking, cigarette smoking and drinking alcohol respectively, and a relative risk of 12.68 was observed for those smoking more than 20 bididcigarettes per day, in each case relative to a baseline of those negative for the relevant habit.
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## Abstract In India, lung cancer is one of the most common and lethal cancers, and tobacco smoking remains its most important etiologic factors. The objective of our study is to examine the effects of different tobacco consumption forms, including smoking and chewing, on lung cancer risk of men in