P N Lee Statistics and Computing Ltd, Sutton, Surrey, UK.
BMC Cancer. 2013 Apr 9;13:189. doi: 10.1186/1471-2407-13-189.
National smoking-specific lung cancer mortality rates are unavailable, and studies presenting estimates are limited, particularly by histology. This hinders interpretation. We attempted to rectify this by deriving estimates indirectly, combining data from national rates and epidemiological studies.
We estimated study-specific absolute mortality rates and variances by histology and smoking habit (never/ever/current/former) based on relative risk estimates derived from studies published in the 20th century, coupled with WHO mortality data for age 70-74 for the relevant country and period. Studies with populations grossly unrepresentative nationally were excluded. 70-74 was chosen based on analyses of large cohort studies presenting rates by smoking and age. Variations by sex, period and region were assessed by meta-analysis and meta-regression.
148 studies provided estimates (Europe 59, America 54, China 22, other Asia 13), 54 providing estimates by histology (squamous cell carcinoma, adenocarcinoma). For all smoking habits and lung cancer types, mortality rates were higher in males, the excess less evident for never smokers. Never smoker rates were clearly highest in China, and showed some increasing time trend, particularly for adenocarcinoma. Ever smoker rates were higher in parts of Europe and America than in China, with the time trend very clear, especially for adenocarcinoma. Variations by time trend and continent were clear for current smokers (rates being higher in Europe and America than Asia), but less clear for former smokers. Models involving continent and trend explained much variability, but non-linearity was sometimes seen (with rates lower in 1991-99 than 1981-90), and there was regional variation within continent (with rates in Europe often high in UK and low in Scandinavia, and higher in North than South America).
The indirect method may be questioned, because of variations in definition of smoking and lung cancer type in the epidemiological database, changes over time in diagnosis of lung cancer types, lack of national representativeness of some studies, and regional variation in smoking misclassification. However, the results seem consistent with the literature, and provide additional information on variability by time and region, including evidence of a rise in never smoker adenocarcinoma rates relative to squamous cell carcinoma rates.
目前缺乏全国性的针对吸烟与肺癌死亡率的具体数据,且相关研究的数量有限,特别是在组织学方面。这给数据解读带来了阻碍。为了解决这一问题,我们尝试通过间接推导的方式来获取数据,即将来自全国性数据和流行病学研究的数据相结合,从而得出具体的组织学和吸烟习惯(从不吸烟/曾经吸烟/当前吸烟/已戒烟)的估计死亡率和方差。
我们根据 20 世纪发表的研究中得出的相对风险估计值,结合相关国家和时期的世卫组织 70-74 岁年龄组的死亡率数据,来估计研究中特定的组织学和吸烟习惯的绝对死亡率和方差。对于那些在全国范围内代表性严重不足的研究,我们将其排除在外。选择 70-74 岁是基于对大样本队列研究的分析,这些研究按照吸烟和年龄来呈现发病率。通过荟萃分析和荟萃回归评估了性别、时期和地区的变化。
共有 148 项研究提供了估计值(欧洲 59 项、美洲 54 项、中国 22 项、其他亚洲 13 项),其中 54 项提供了组织学(鳞状细胞癌、腺癌)方面的估计值。对于所有吸烟习惯和肺癌类型,男性的死亡率更高,从不吸烟者的超额死亡率不那么明显。从不吸烟者的比率在中国显然是最高的,并且呈现出一些时间趋势,特别是对于腺癌。在欧洲和美洲的部分地区,曾经吸烟者的比率高于中国,而且时间趋势非常明显,特别是对于腺癌。目前吸烟者的时间趋势和大陆差异明显(欧洲和美洲的比率高于亚洲),但对于曾经吸烟者来说,差异则不太明显。涉及大陆和趋势的模型解释了很多可变性,但有时也会出现非线性(1991-99 年的比率低于 1981-90 年),而且在大陆内部也存在区域差异(欧洲的比率通常在英国和斯堪的纳维亚半岛较高,而在北美则高于南美)。
由于流行病学数据库中吸烟和肺癌类型的定义存在差异、肺癌类型的诊断随时间的变化、部分研究缺乏全国代表性以及吸烟分类的区域差异,间接方法可能会受到质疑。然而,这些结果似乎与文献一致,并提供了有关时间和区域变化的额外信息,包括从不吸烟者腺癌与鳞癌比率相对上升的证据。