Policy and Information Directorate, Cancer Research UK, The Angel Building, 407 St John Street, London, EC1V 4AD, UK.
NHS National Services Scotland, Information Services Division, Meridian Court, 5 Cadogan Street, Glasgow, G2 6QE, Scotland.
Br J Cancer. 2018 Apr;118(8):1130-1141. doi: 10.1038/s41416-018-0029-6. Epub 2018 Mar 23.
Changing population-level exposure to modifiable risk factors is a key driver of changing cancer incidence. Understanding these changes is therefore vital when prioritising risk-reduction policies, in order to have the biggest impact on reducing cancer incidence. UK figures on the number of risk factor-attributable cancers are updated here to reflect changing behaviour as assessed in representative national surveys, and new epidemiological evidence. Figures are also presented by UK constituent country because prevalence of risk factor exposure varies between them.
Population attributable fractions (PAFs) were calculated for combinations of risk factor and cancer type with sufficient/convincing evidence of a causal association. Relative risks (RRs) were drawn from meta-analyses of cohort studies where possible. Prevalence of exposure to risk factors was obtained from nationally representative population surveys. Cancer incidence data for 2015 were sourced from national data releases and, where needed, personal communications. PAF calculations were stratified by age, sex and risk factor exposure level and then combined to create summary PAFs by cancer type, sex and country.
Nearly four in ten (37.7%) cancer cases in 2015 in the UK were attributable to known risk factors. The proportion was around two percentage points higher in UK males (38.6%) than in UK females (36.8%). Comparing UK countries, the attributable proportion was highest in Scotland (41.5% for persons) and lowest in England (37.3% for persons). Tobacco smoking contributed by far the largest proportion of attributable cancer cases, followed by overweight/obesity, accounting for 15.1% and 6.3%, respectively, of all cases in the UK in 2015. For 10 cancer types, including two of the five most common cancer types in the UK (lung cancer and melanoma skin cancer), more than 70% of UK cancer cases were attributable to known risk factors.
Tobacco and overweight/obesity remain the top contributors of attributable cancer cases. Tobacco smoking has the highest PAF because it greatly increases cancer risk and has a large number of cancer types associated with it. Overweight/obesity has the second-highest PAF because it affects a high proportion of the UK population and is also linked with many cancer types. Public health policy may seek to mitigate the level of harm associated with exposure or reduce exposure levels-both approaches may effectively impact cancer incidence. Differences in PAFs between countries and sexes are primarily due to varying prevalence of exposure to risk factors and varying proportions of specific cancer types. This variation in turn is affected by socio-demographic differences which drive differences in exposure to theoretically avoidable 'lifestyle' factors. PAFs at UK country level have not been available previously and they should be used by policymakers in devolved nations. PAFs are estimates based on the best available data, limitations in those data would generally bias toward underestimation of PAFs. Regular collection of risk factor exposure prevalence data which corresponds with epidemiological evidence is vital for analyses like this and should remain a priority for the UK Government and devolved Administrations.
改变可改变的风险因素在人群中的暴露水平是改变癌症发病率的关键驱动因素。因此,在优先制定降低风险的政策时,了解这些变化至关重要,以便对降低癌症发病率产生最大影响。英国关于归因于风险因素的癌症数量的数字在这里进行了更新,以反映代表性全国调查评估的不断变化的行为以及新的流行病学证据。按英国组成国呈现数字,因为风险因素暴露的流行程度在它们之间有所不同。
对于具有因果关联的充分/令人信服证据的风险因素和癌症类型组合,计算了人群归因分数 (PAF)。尽可能从队列研究的荟萃分析中得出相对风险 (RR)。从全国代表性的人口调查中获得风险因素暴露的流行率。2015 年的癌症发病率数据来自国家数据发布,在需要的情况下,还来自个人交流。PAF 计算按年龄、性别和风险因素暴露水平进行分层,然后按癌症类型、性别和国家进行汇总,得出综合 PAF。
2015 年,英国近四成(37.7%)的癌症病例归因于已知风险因素。在英国男性(38.6%)中,这一比例比英国女性(36.8%)高出约两个百分点。在英国各地区中,归因比例最高的是苏格兰(占人口的 41.5%),最低的是英格兰(占人口的 37.3%)。吸烟是归因于癌症病例的最大比例,其次是超重/肥胖,分别占英国 2015 年所有病例的 15.1%和 6.3%。对于 10 种癌症类型,包括英国五种最常见癌症类型中的两种(肺癌和黑色素瘤皮肤癌),英国超过 70%的癌症病例归因于已知风险因素。
烟草和超重/肥胖仍然是归因于癌症病例的主要原因。吸烟的 PAF 最高,因为它大大增加了癌症风险,并且与许多癌症类型有关。超重/肥胖的 PAF 排名第二,因为它影响了很大一部分英国人口,并且也与许多癌症类型有关。公共卫生政策可能会寻求减轻与暴露相关的伤害程度或降低暴露水平-这两种方法都可能有效地影响癌症发病率。国家之间和性别之间 PAF 的差异主要是由于风险因素暴露的流行程度不同,以及特定癌症类型的比例不同。这种差异反过来又受到社会人口差异的影响,这些差异导致了与理论上可避免的“生活方式”因素有关的暴露差异。英国各地区以前没有提供 PAF 数据,政策制定者应在分权国家使用。PAF 是基于最佳可用数据的估计值,这些数据的局限性通常会导致 PAF 被低估。定期收集与流行病学证据相对应的风险因素暴露流行率数据对于此类分析至关重要,英国政府和分权行政部门应继续将其作为优先事项。