Independent Researcher, Greenport, NY, USA.
Independent Researcher, Bonny Doon, CA, USA.
Crit Rev Toxicol. 2019 Oct;49(9):790-818. doi: 10.1080/10408444.2019.1700210. Epub 2020 Jan 27.
Lung cancer mortality (LCM) has been associated with smoking and air pollution. This article draws on smoking relationships to clarify air pollution relationships. We analyzed cohort and population-based smoking studies and identified effects of latency and cumulative exposures. We found cogent relationships through longitudinal rather than cross-sectional analysis, thus involving historical data. We also considered passive smoking, occupational exposures, radon, and established carcinogens. We found stable nonsmoking LCM rates during periods of improving ambient air quality. We considered 59 cross-sectional studies of lung cancer and air pollution and found similar statistically significant relative risks for PM, PM, EC, NO, SO, SO, and O, and minimal risks for benzo(alpha)pyrene and trace metals. Most air pollution studies did not consider latency, exposure duration, or temporal trends; none included estimates of smoking risks implied by their models. We conclude that while LCM studies of smoking, radon, and occupational exposures appropriately considered latency and cumulative exposures; ambient air quality studies have not. Lung cancer has a long memory and exposure histories are required. Effects of cumulative exposures after pollution abatement include substantially reduced risk estimates, delayed health benefits, inability to show accountability for the abatement. However, associations of lung cancer with ambient air pollution cannot be ruled out, especially for historic periods when much higher exposures persisted. Given the major reductions in air quality and smoking habits that have been realized since the Clean Air Act, new studies of LCM and air pollution, including smoking histories and exposure data decades before diagnosis, are needed.HighlightsLifetime cigarette consumption is a good predictor of lung cancer risk.The latent period for lung cancer ranges from about 10 to 30 y.Lung cancer risks for nonsmokers have been stable during the period when ambient air quality improved substantially.Risks of established airborne carcinogens may have been important in the past but not under current conditions.Radon can be important.Air pollution-lung cancer risks should be evaluated jointly with smoking risks but are sensitive to their accuracy.When cumulative exposures to conventional air pollutants are considered rather than concurrent, the applicable risk estimates may decrease by an order of magnitude and abatement benefits will not be readily apparent.Most of the recent cross-sectional studies of lung cancer and regulated air pollutants did not consider latency, duration of exposure, or established carcinogens and their findings have been misinterpreted.Effects of smoking on LCM are now well established as are the spatial distributions of ambient air pollution; however, linkages among the three parameters remain uncertain.
肺癌死亡率(LCM)与吸烟和空气污染有关。本文利用吸烟关系来阐明空气污染关系。我们分析了队列和基于人群的吸烟研究,并确定了潜伏期和累积暴露的影响。我们通过纵向而不是横断面分析发现了有力的关系,因此涉及历史数据。我们还考虑了被动吸烟、职业暴露、氡和已确定的致癌物。我们发现,在改善环境空气质量的时期,稳定的不吸烟肺癌死亡率。我们考虑了 59 项关于肺癌和空气污染的横断面研究,发现 PM、PM、EC、NO、SO、SO 和 O 的统计学上显著的相对风险相似,而苯并(α)芘和痕量金属的风险最小。大多数空气污染研究没有考虑潜伏期、暴露时间或时间趋势;没有一项研究包括其模型所暗示的吸烟风险估计。我们的结论是,虽然关于吸烟、氡和职业暴露的 LCM 研究适当考虑了潜伏期和累积暴露,但环境空气质量研究没有。肺癌具有很长的记忆,需要暴露史。污染减排后累积暴露的影响包括风险估计大大降低、健康益处延迟、无法证明减排的责任。然而,不能排除肺癌与环境空气污染的关联,特别是在历史时期,当时持续存在更高的暴露。鉴于自《清洁空气法案》以来空气质量和吸烟习惯已经大幅改善,需要对 LCM 和空气污染进行新的研究,包括在诊断前几十年的吸烟史和暴露数据。
要点
终身吸烟量是肺癌风险的良好预测指标。
肺癌的潜伏期约为 10 至 30 年。
在环境空气质量大幅改善的时期,非吸烟者的肺癌风险保持稳定。
已确定的空气传播致癌物的风险在过去可能很重要,但在当前条件下则不然。
氡很重要。
空气污染-肺癌风险应与吸烟风险一起评估,但对其准确性敏感。
当考虑常规空气污染物的累积暴露而不是同时考虑时,适用的风险估计可能会降低一个数量级,减排效益将不易显现。
最近的大多数关于肺癌和受监管空气污染物的横断面研究都没有考虑潜伏期、暴露时间或已确定的致癌物,并且他们的发现被误解了。
吸烟对 LCM 的影响现在已经得到很好的证实,环境空气污染的空间分布也是如此;然而,这三个参数之间的联系仍然不确定。