Epidemiological Research Center (ERC), New No. 27, Canal Road, Kilpauk Garden Colony, Chennai, 600010, Tamil Nadu, India.
Cancer Causes Control. 2012 Mar;23 Suppl 1:91-8. doi: 10.1007/s10552-012-9905-1. Epub 2012 Feb 17.
The objective of this work was to describe the relationships between educational level, tobacco chewing, and cancer mortality in south India, among middle-aged adults who never smoked tobacco or drank alcohol, to eliminate confounding by those habits.
This case-control study was conducted in two areas of Tamil Nadu state. The cases studied were 2,580 lifelong non-smoking non-drinkers who died at age 35-69 years during 1995-1998, with interviews in 1998-2000 of a spouse, neighbour, or close associate, who retrospectively provided information on the education and chewing/other habits of the deceased. Underlying neoplastic cause of death was determined by verbal autopsy. The controls were 429,306 lifelong non-smoking non-drinkers aged 35-69 from these two study areas, interviewed during 1998-2001.
Among the controls, prevalence of current tobacco chewing was much higher in those with less education, irrespective of sex, urban/rural residence, or birth year. Compared with never chewers, ever chewers had fivefold higher mortality from mouth cancer (odds ratio 4.9, 95% confidence interval 3.5-6.8), and 1.5 to twofold higher mortality from cancers of the pharynx/larynx/oesophagus combined, stomach, and cervix. Each of these cancers had a strong, independent, inverse association with educational level.
This study supports a substantial body of evidence that tobacco chewing can cause mouth cancer, and adds to evidence that chewing may increase the risk of cancer at other sites. The analysis suggests a possible link with cervical cancer, but this could have been because of residual confounding by social factors. Avoidance of tobacco chewing would avert many cancer deaths in south India, especially for people who have received relatively little formal education.
本研究旨在描述在印度南部,从不吸烟和饮酒的中年人群中,教育水平、咀嚼烟草与癌症死亡率之间的关系,以消除这些习惯的混杂作用。
本病例对照研究在泰米尔纳德邦的两个地区进行。研究对象为 2580 名年龄在 35-69 岁之间的终生不吸烟不饮酒的非吸烟者,他们在 1995-1998 年间死亡,在 1998-2000 年间由配偶、邻居或密友进行访谈,这些人回顾性地提供了死者的教育程度和咀嚼/其他习惯信息。通过口头尸检确定潜在的肿瘤死因。对照组为来自这两个研究地区的 429306 名年龄在 35-69 岁之间的终生不吸烟不饮酒者,于 1998-2001 年期间接受访谈。
在对照组中,无论性别、城乡居住情况或出生年份如何,受教育程度较低者当前咀嚼烟草的患病率均高得多。与从不咀嚼者相比,咀嚼者的口腔癌死亡率高出五倍(比值比 4.9,95%置信区间 3.5-6.8),咽/喉/食管联合癌、胃癌和宫颈癌的死亡率也高出 1.5 至两倍。这些癌症均与教育水平呈显著、独立、负相关。
本研究支持大量证据表明咀嚼烟草可导致口腔癌,并进一步证明咀嚼可能会增加其他部位癌症的风险。该分析提示咀嚼与宫颈癌之间可能存在关联,但这可能是由于社会因素残留混杂所致。在印度南部,避免咀嚼烟草将避免许多癌症死亡,尤其是对那些接受相对较少正规教育的人而言。