Humble C G, Samet J M, Pathak D R, Skipper B J
Am J Public Health. 1985 Feb;75(2):145-8. doi: 10.2105/ajph.75.2.145.
A population-based case-control study of lung cancer was performed in New Mexico to explain the differing patterns of lung cancer occurrence in the state's "Hispanic" Whites and other Whites. From 1980 through 1982, interviews were completed with 521 cases and 769 controls. In the male controls, the prevalence of current and previous cigarette usage was similar in the two ethnic groups, but Hispanics smoked fewer cigarettes daily. In the female controls, a lower percentage of Hispanics had ever smoked and their usual consumption was less than that of other White women. Older Hispanic female smokers had used hand-rolled cigarettes for an average of 8.8 years, whereas other White women of the same age had used this type for less than one-half year. Both stratified and multiple logistic analysis showed comparable risks of lung cancer in Hispanic White and other White smokers. There was no evidence of interaction between ethnicity and cigarette smoking. These analyses imply that the differences in lung cancer incidence between New Mexico's Hispanic Whites and other Whites are largely explained by the patterns of cigarette smoking of these two groups.
在新墨西哥州开展了一项基于人群的肺癌病例对照研究,以解释该州“西班牙裔”白人和其他白人中肺癌发生的不同模式。从1980年到1982年,完成了对521例病例和769名对照的访谈。在男性对照中,两个种族群体当前和既往吸烟的患病率相似,但西班牙裔每日吸烟量较少。在女性对照中,西班牙裔曾经吸烟的比例较低,且她们的通常吸烟量低于其他白人女性。年长的西班牙裔女性吸烟者平均使用手卷烟8.8年,而同龄的其他白人女性使用手卷烟的时间不到半年。分层分析和多因素逻辑分析均显示,西班牙裔白人和其他白人吸烟者患肺癌的风险相当。没有证据表明种族与吸烟之间存在相互作用。这些分析表明,新墨西哥州西班牙裔白人和其他白人之间肺癌发病率的差异在很大程度上是由这两个群体的吸烟模式所解释的。