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发达国家烟草导致的死亡率:基于国家人口动态统计数据的间接估计

Mortality from tobacco in developed countries: indirect estimation from national vital statistics.

作者信息

Peto R, Lopez A D, Boreham J, Thun M, Heath C

机构信息

Imperial Cancer Research Fund Cancer Studies Unit, University of Oxford, Radcliffe Infirmary, UK.

出版信息

Lancet. 1992 May 23;339(8804):1268-78. doi: 10.1016/0140-6736(92)91600-d.

Abstract

Prolonged cigarette smoking causes even more deaths from other diseases than from lung cancer. In developed countries, the absolute age-sex-specific lung cancer rates can be used to indicate the approximate proportions due to tobacco of deaths not only from lung cancer itself but also, indirectly, from vascular disease and from various other categories of disease. Even in the absence of direct information on smoking histories, therefore, national mortality from tobacco can be estimated approximately just from the disease mortality statistics that are available from all major developed countries for about 1985 (and for 1975 and so, by extrapolation, for 1995). The relation between the absolute excess of lung cancer and the proportional excess of other diseases can only be approximate, and so as not to overestimate the effects of tobacco it has been taken to be only half that suggested by a recent large prospective study of smoking and death among one million Americans. Application of such methods indicates that, in developed countries alone, annual deaths from smoking number about 0.9 million in 1965, 1.3 million in 1975, 1.7 million in 1985, and 2.1 million in 1995 (and hence about 21 million in the decade 1990-99: 5-6 million European Community, 5-6 million USA, 5 million former USSR, 3 million Eastern and other Europe, and 2 million elsewhere, [ie, Australia, Canada, Japan, and New Zealand]). More than half these deaths will be at 35-69 years of age: during the 1990s tobacco will in developed countries cause about 30% of all deaths at 35-69 (making it the largest single cause of premature death) plus about 14% of all at older ages. Those killed at older ages are on average already almost 80 years old, however, and might have died soon anyway, but those killed by tobacco at 35-69 lose an average of about 23 years of life. At present just under 20% of all deaths in developed countries are attributed to tobacco, but this percentage is still rising, suggesting that on current smoking patterns just over 20% of those now living in developed countries will eventually be killed by tobacco (ie, about a quarter of a billion, out of a current total population of just under one and a quarter billion).

摘要

长期吸烟导致的死于其他疾病的人数比死于肺癌的人数更多。在发达国家,特定年龄性别肺癌的绝对发病率不仅可用于表明因烟草导致的死于肺癌本身的大致比例,还可间接表明因烟草导致的死于血管疾病和其他各类疾病的大致比例。因此,即使没有关于吸烟史的直接信息,仅根据所有主要发达国家约1985年(以及1975年,通过外推法可得1995年)可获取的疾病死亡率统计数据,就可以大致估算出全国因烟草导致的死亡率。肺癌绝对超额发病率与其他疾病比例超额发病率之间的关系只能是大致的,为了不高估烟草的影响,采用的比例仅为最近对100万美国人进行的关于吸烟与死亡的大型前瞻性研究结果的一半。运用这些方法表明,仅在发达国家,1965年因吸烟导致的年死亡人数约为90万,1975年为130万,1985年为170万,1995年为210万(因此在1990 - 1999年这十年间约为2100万:欧洲共同体500 - 600万,美国500 - 600万,前苏联500万,东欧及其他欧洲地区300万,其他地区200万,[即澳大利亚、加拿大、日本和新西兰])。这些死亡人数中超过一半将是35 - 69岁的人群:在20世纪90年代,烟草在发达国家将导致35 - 69岁人群中约30%的死亡(使其成为过早死亡的最大单一原因),以及老年人群中约14%的死亡。然而,在老年人群中因吸烟死亡的人平均已近80岁,无论如何可能很快就会死亡,但在35 - 69岁因烟草死亡的人平均失去约23年的寿命。目前,发达国家中略低于20%的死亡归因于烟草,但这一比例仍在上升,这表明按照目前的吸烟模式,发达国家中略超过20%的现有人口最终将死于烟草(即,在目前略低于12.5亿的总人口中约为25亿)。

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