CHS National Cancer Control Center and Department of Community Medicine and Epidemiology, Carmel Medical Center and Bruce Rappaport Faculty of Medicine, Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa, Israel.
Department of Thoracic Surgery, Rambam Medical Center, Haifa, Israel.
Int J Cancer. 2015 Nov 1;137(9):2155-62. doi: 10.1002/ijc.29587. Epub 2015 May 18.
Lung cancer rates in Israeli Jews have remained stable over the last five decades and are much lower than in most developed countries despite high historical smoking rates. We compared lung cancer risk in Jews and non-Jews in Israel and in the United States. Data were derived from a population-based, case-control study in Israel (638 cases, 496 controls) to estimate lung cancer risk associated with smoking. Data were also acquired from a case-control study in the United States with information on religious affiliation (5,093 cases, 4,735 controls). Smoking was associated with lung cancer risk in all religion/gender groups in both studies. However, major differences in risk magnitude were noted between Jews and non-Jews; ever smoking was associated with a moderately elevated risk of lung cancer in Jewish men and women in Israel (OR = 4.61, 2.90-7.31 and OR = 2.10, 1.36-3.24, respectively), and in Jewish men and women in the United States (OR = 7.63, 5.34-10.90 and OR = 8.50, 5.94-12.17) but were significantly higher in Israeli non-Jewish men (OR = 12.96, 4.83-34.76) and US non-Jewish men and women (OR = 11.33, 9.09-14.12 and OR = 12.78, 10.45-15.63). A significant interaction between smoking and religion was evident in light, moderate and heavy male and female smokers. The differences in risk level between Israeli Jews and non-Jews could not be explained by lung cancer genetic risk variants which were identified in GWAS (genes in the CHRNA5, TERT and CLPTM1L regions). Data from the two studies support the notion of a reduced risk of lung cancer in Jewish compared to non-Jewish smokers in different areas of the world.
以色列犹太人的肺癌发病率在过去五十年中保持稳定,尽管历史吸烟率较高,但远低于大多数发达国家。我们比较了以色列和美国的犹太人和非犹太人的肺癌风险。数据来自以色列一项基于人群的病例对照研究(638 例病例,496 例对照),以估计与吸烟相关的肺癌风险。数据还来自美国的一项病例对照研究,该研究提供了宗教信仰信息(5093 例病例,4735 例对照)。在这两项研究中,所有宗教/性别群体的吸烟都与肺癌风险相关。然而,在犹太人和非犹太人之间,风险幅度存在显著差异;在以色列的犹太男女中,曾经吸烟与肺癌风险中度升高相关(OR=4.61,2.90-7.31 和 OR=2.10,1.36-3.24),在美国的犹太男女中也是如此(OR=7.63,5.34-10.90 和 OR=8.50,5.94-12.17),但在以色列的非犹太男性中显著更高(OR=12.96,4.83-34.76),在美国的非犹太男女中也更高(OR=11.33,9.09-14.12 和 OR=12.78,10.45-15.63)。在轻度、中度和重度男性和女性吸烟者中,吸烟与宗教之间存在显著的相互作用。在以色列的犹太人和非犹太人之间,肺癌遗传风险变异(GWAS 中 CHRNA5、TERT 和 CLPTM1L 区域的基因)无法解释风险水平的差异。这两项研究的数据支持了在不同地区,与非犹太吸烟者相比,犹太吸烟者患肺癌的风险较低的观点。