Eckel Sandrah P, Cockburn Myles, Shu Yu-Hsiang, Deng Huiyu, Lurmann Frederick W, Liu Lihua, Gilliland Frank D
Department of Preventive Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, USA.
Department of Preventive Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, USA Department of Research and Evaluation, Kaiser Permanente Southern California, Pasadena, California, USA.
Thorax. 2016 Oct;71(10):891-8. doi: 10.1136/thoraxjnl-2015-207927. Epub 2016 Aug 4.
Exposure to ambient air pollutants has been associated with increased lung cancer incidence and mortality, but due to the high case fatality rate, little is known about the impacts of air pollution exposures on survival after diagnosis. This study aimed to determine whether ambient air pollutant exposures are associated with the survival of patients with lung cancer.
Participants were 352 053 patients with newly diagnosed lung cancer during 1988-2009 in California, ascertained by the California Cancer Registry. Average residential ambient air pollutant concentrations were estimated for each participant's follow-up period. Cox proportional hazards models were used to estimate HRs relating air pollutant exposures to all-cause mortality overall and stratified by stage (localised only, regional and distant site) and histology (squamous cell carcinoma, adenocarcinoma, small cell carcinoma, large cell carcinoma and others) at diagnosis, adjusting for potential individual and area-level confounders.
Adjusting for histology and other potential confounders, the HRs associated with 1 SD increases in NO2, O3, PM10, PM2.5 for patients with localised stage at diagnosis were 1.30 (95% CI 1.28 to 1.32), 1.04 (95% CI 1.02 to 1.05), 1.26 (95% CI 1.25 to 1.28) and 1.38 (95% CI 1.35 to 1.41), respectively. Adjusted HRs were smaller in later stages and varied by histological type within stage (p<0.01, except O3). The largest associations were for patients with early-stage non-small cell cancers, particularly adenocarcinomas.
These epidemiological findings support the hypothesis that air pollution exposures after lung cancer diagnosis shorten survival. Future studies should evaluate the impacts of exposure reduction.
暴露于环境空气污染物与肺癌发病率和死亡率增加有关,但由于肺癌的高病死率,对于空气污染暴露对肺癌诊断后生存的影响知之甚少。本研究旨在确定环境空气污染物暴露是否与肺癌患者的生存相关。
研究对象为1988年至2009年期间在加利福尼亚州新诊断为肺癌的352053例患者,数据由加利福尼亚癌症登记处确定。估算了每位参与者随访期间的平均居住环境空气污染物浓度。使用Cox比例风险模型估计空气污染暴露与全因死亡率之间的风险比(HRs),总体上以及按诊断时的分期(仅局限性、区域性和远处转移)和组织学类型(鳞状细胞癌、腺癌、小细胞癌、大细胞癌和其他)进行分层,并对潜在的个体和地区层面的混杂因素进行了调整。
在调整组织学类型和其他潜在混杂因素后,诊断为局限性分期的患者,二氧化氮(NO₂)、臭氧(O₃)、可吸入颗粒物(PM₁₀)、细颗粒物(PM₂.₅)浓度每增加1个标准差(SD),其HRs分别为1.30(95%置信区间[CI]:1.28至1.32)、1.04(95%CI:1.02至1.05)、1.26(95%CI:1.25至1.28)和1.38(95%CI:1.35至1.41)。后期阶段的调整后HRs较小,且在各期内随组织学类型而异(p<0.01,臭氧除外)。最大的关联见于早期非小细胞癌患者,尤其是腺癌患者。
这些流行病学研究结果支持以下假设,即肺癌诊断后暴露于空气污染会缩短生存期。未来的研究应评估减少暴露的影响。