Doll R, Peto R, Wheatley K, Gray R, Sutherland I
Imperial Cancer Research Fund Cancer Studies Unit, Nuffield Department of Clinical Medicine, Radcliffe Infirmary, Oxford.
BMJ. 1994 Oct 8;309(6959):901-11. doi: 10.1136/bmj.309.6959.901.
To assess the hazards associated with long term use of tobacco.
Prospective study of mortality in relation to smoking habits assessed in 1951 and again from time to time thereafter, with causes sought of deaths over 40 years (to 1991). Continuation of a study that was last reported after 20 years' follow up (1951-71).
34,439 British male doctors who replied to a postal questionnaire in 1951, of whom 10,000 had died during the first 20 years and another 10,000 have died during the second 20 years.
Excess mortality associated with smoking was about twice as extreme during the second half of the study as it had been during the first half. The death rate ratios during 1971-91 (comparing continuing cigarette smokers with life-long non-smokers) were approximately threefold at ages 45-64 and twofold at ages 65-84. The excess mortality was chiefly from diseases that can be caused by smoking. Positive associations with smoking were confirmed for death from cancers of the mouth, oesophagus, pharynx, larynx, lung, pancreas, and bladder; from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and other respiratory diseases; from vascular diseases; from peptic ulcer; and (perhaps because of confounding by personality and alcohol use) from cirrhosis, suicide, and poisoning. A negative association was confirmed with death from Parkinson's disease. Those who stopped smoking before middle age subsequently avoided almost all of the excess risk that they would otherwise have suffered, but even those who stopped smoking in middle age were subsequently at substantially less risk than those who continued to smoke.
Results from the first 20 years of this study, and of other studies at that time, substantially underestimated the hazards of long term use of tobacco. It now seems that about half of all regular cigarette smokers will eventually be killed by their habit.
评估长期吸烟的危害。
对1951年评估的吸烟习惯以及此后不时评估的吸烟习惯与死亡率的前瞻性研究,并探寻40年期间(至1991年)的死亡原因。一项研究的延续,该研究上次报告是在20年随访期(1951 - 1971年)之后。
1951年回复邮寄问卷的34439名英国男医生,其中10000人在最初20年期间死亡,另有10000人在第二个20年期间死亡。
在研究的后半期,与吸烟相关的超额死亡率比前半期大约高出一倍。1971 - 1991年期间的死亡率比值(将持续吸烟者与终身不吸烟者进行比较)在45 - 64岁年龄段约为三倍,在65 - 84岁年龄段约为两倍。超额死亡率主要源于可由吸烟引起的疾病。吸烟与口腔癌、食道癌、咽癌、喉癌、肺癌、胰腺癌和膀胱癌死亡呈正相关;与慢性阻塞性肺疾病和其他呼吸道疾病死亡呈正相关;与血管疾病死亡呈正相关;与消化性溃疡死亡呈正相关;以及(可能由于性格和饮酒的混杂作用)与肝硬化、自杀和中毒死亡呈正相关。与帕金森病死亡呈负相关得到证实。中年之前戒烟的人随后几乎避免了他们原本会遭受的所有额外风险,但即使是中年时戒烟的人随后的风险也比继续吸烟者大幅降低。
本研究最初20年以及当时其他研究的结果大大低估了长期吸烟的危害。现在看来,所有经常吸烟的人中约有一半最终会死于吸烟习惯。