MRC Integrative Epidemiology Unit, Population Health Sciences, Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol, Bristol, BS8 1TL, UK.
Bristol Dental Hospital and School, University of Bristol, Bristol, BS1 2LY, UK.
Nat Commun. 2020 Nov 27;11(1):6071. doi: 10.1038/s41467-020-19822-6.
The independent effects of smoking and alcohol in head and neck cancer are not clear, given the strong association between these risk factors. Their apparent synergistic effect reported in previous observational studies may also underestimate independent effects. Here we report multivariable Mendelian randomization performed in a two-sample approach using summary data on 6,034 oral/oropharyngeal cases and 6,585 controls from a recent genome-wide association study. Our results demonstrate strong evidence for an independent causal effect of smoking on oral/oropharyngeal cancer (IVW OR 2.6, 95% CI = 1.7, 3.9 per standard deviation increase in lifetime smoking behaviour) and an independent causal effect of alcohol consumption when controlling for smoking (IVW OR 2.1, 95% CI = 1.1, 3.8 per standard deviation increase in drinks consumed per week). This suggests the possibility that the causal effect of alcohol may have been underestimated. However, the extent to which alcohol is modified by smoking requires further investigation.
鉴于吸烟和饮酒这两个风险因素之间存在很强的关联性,因此它们对头颈部癌症的独立影响尚不清楚。先前观察性研究报告的两者明显的协同作用也可能低估了独立影响。在这里,我们报告了一项两样本孟德尔随机化研究,使用了最近全基因组关联研究中 6034 例口腔/口咽癌病例和 6585 例对照的汇总数据进行多变量分析。我们的研究结果表明,吸烟对口腔/口咽癌有很强的因果作用(IVW OR 2.6,95%CI=1.7,3.9,每增加一个标准差的终生吸烟行为),并且在控制吸烟因素后,饮酒也有独立的因果作用(IVW OR 2.1,95%CI=1.1,3.8,每增加一个标准差的每周饮酒量)。这表明酒精的因果作用可能被低估了。然而,需要进一步研究吸烟对酒精的影响程度。