Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute, NIH, Rockville, Maryland.
National Center for Environmental Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia.
Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev. 2021 Jun;30(6):1165-1174. doi: 10.1158/1055-9965.EPI-20-1601. Epub 2021 Mar 18.
Accumulating evidence suggests that non-daily smokers have higher disease and mortality risks than never smokers. Yet, the accuracy of self-reported non-daily cigarette smoking is poorly understood.
We examined the concordance between self-reported non-daily smoking and serum cotinine in 18,835 adult participants (20 years or older) of the 2007 to 2014 National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys, in comparison with daily smokers and nonsmokers. We also analyzed concentrations of the urinary biomarker 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanol (NNAL) by smoking status.
In the study sample, 77.8% (14,660) reported currently not smoking (nonsmokers), 18.3% (3,446) smoked every day (daily smokers), and 3.9% (729) smoked on some days of the past month (non-daily smokers). Just 2.1% of nonsmokers had cotinine concentrations in the active smoking range (>10 ng/mL), compared with 70.4% of non-daily and 98.8% of daily smokers. Non-daily smokers reported smoking a median of 24 cigarettes per month [interquartile range (IQR) = 9-60] and had substantially higher concentrations of NNAL (median = 72.5; IQR = 14.8-211.0 pg/mL) than nonsmokers (median = 0.4; IQR = 0.4-2.1 pg/mL), although lower than daily smokers (median = 294.0; IQR = 148.0-542.0 pg/mL). Among non-daily smokers, concentrations of cotinine and NNAL were positively correlated with days and cigarettes smoked per month ( < 0.001).
We observed excellent concordance between self-reported non-daily cigarette smoking and concentrations of serum cotinine.
These results provide evidence for the validity of self-reported non-daily smoking and indicate that non-daily smokers are exposed to substantial concentrations of carcinogenic nitrosamines regardless of the low number of cigarettes they smoke per month.
越来越多的证据表明,非每日吸烟者比从不吸烟者患疾病和死亡的风险更高。然而,自我报告的非每日吸烟的准确性尚未得到充分了解。
我们在 2007 年至 2014 年全国健康和营养调查的 18835 名成年参与者(20 岁或以上)中,比较了每日吸烟者和不吸烟者,检查了自我报告的非每日吸烟与血清可替宁之间的一致性。我们还按吸烟状况分析了尿液生物标志物 4-(甲基亚硝氨基)-1-(3-吡啶基)-1-丁醇(NNAL)的浓度。
在研究样本中,77.8%(14660 人)报告目前不吸烟(非吸烟者),18.3%(3446 人)每天吸烟(每日吸烟者),3.9%(729 人)在过去一个月的某些日子吸烟(非每日吸烟者)。只有 2.1%的不吸烟者血清可替宁浓度处于活跃吸烟范围(>10ng/ml),而非每日吸烟者为 70.4%,每日吸烟者为 98.8%。非每日吸烟者报告每月平均吸烟 24 支香烟[中位数(IQR)=9-60],NNAL 浓度明显高于不吸烟者(中位数=72.5;IQR=14.8-211.0pg/ml),但低于每日吸烟者(中位数=294.0;IQR=148.0-542.0pg/ml)。在非每日吸烟者中,血清可替宁和 NNAL 浓度与每月吸烟天数和吸烟支数呈正相关(<0.001)。
我们观察到自我报告的非每日吸烟与血清可替宁浓度之间具有极好的一致性。
这些结果为自我报告的非每日吸烟的有效性提供了证据,并表明非每日吸烟者即使每月吸烟支数较少,也会接触到大量致癌亚硝胺。