Day G L, Blot W J, Austin D F, Bernstein L, Greenberg R S, Preston-Martin S, Schoenberg J B, Winn D M, McLaughlin J K, Fraumeni J F
Epidemiology and Biostatistics Program, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20852.
J Natl Cancer Inst. 1993 Mar 17;85(6):465-73. doi: 10.1093/jnci/85.6.465.
In the United States, Blacks have increasingly higher rates of oral and pharyngeal cancer (oral cancer) than Whites, but determinants of the racial disparity have not been clear.
The purpose of this study was to explore reasons for the higher incidence of oral cancer among Blacks than Whites.
We used data from a large, population-based case-control study of oral cancer risk factors conducted in four areas of the United States. On the basis of interviews that ascertained characteristics of 1065 oral cancer patients (871 Whites and 194 Blacks) and 1182 controls (979 Whites and 203 Blacks), we examined racial differences in exposure prevalences and relative risks for a number of known etiologic factors, including tobacco and alcohol consumption, diet, and socioeconomic and other variables. To evaluate the extent to which the major risk factors explained the excess risk of oral cancer among Blacks, population-attributable risks were calculated.
Differences with respect to alcohol consumption, especially among current smokers, emerged as the most important explanatory variables. After adjusting for smoking, heavy drinking (> or = 30 drinks/week) resulted in a 17-fold increased risk among Blacks and a ninefold increase among Whites. Among drinkers, Blacks tended to drink more than Whites. Also, a higher (P = .01) percentage of Blacks (37%) than Whites (28%) were current smokers, although there were little or no racial differences in relative risks or patterns of use for other smoking variables, including number of cigarettes smoked per day, years of smoking, and age started smoking. From population-attributable risk calculations, we estimated that differences in alcohol and tobacco use account for the bulk of the higher incidence of oral cancer among Blacks in the United States and that, in the absence of alcohol and tobacco, the rates of this cancer according to race (Black, White) and gender would be nearly equal. With regard to other potential etiologic factors, protective effects provided by higher dietary intake of fruits and vitamin C were more pronounced for Whites, while Blacks more often tended to be in sociodemographic and medical or dental health categories associated with increased risk.
These analyses provide evidence that various environmental or lifestyle determinants of oral cancer may contribute to the higher oral cancer rates in Blacks than in Whites in the United States, but that patterns and risks associated with alcohol consumption, particularly among current smokers, are the most important contributors to the excess risk in Blacks.
These findings suggest that the key to prevention of oral and pharyngeal cancers among both Blacks and Whites is reduced intake of alcoholic beverages and, because of strong interactive effects, the cessation of smoking.
在美国,黑人的口腔和咽癌(口腔癌)发病率比白人越来越高,但种族差异的决定因素尚不清楚。
本研究的目的是探讨黑人口腔癌发病率高于白人的原因。
我们使用了来自美国四个地区进行的一项基于人群的大型口腔癌危险因素病例对照研究的数据。根据对1065名口腔癌患者(871名白人、194名黑人)和1182名对照者(979名白人、203名黑人)特征的访谈,我们检查了多种已知病因因素(包括烟草和酒精消费、饮食以及社会经济和其他变量)在暴露患病率和相对风险方面的种族差异。为了评估主要危险因素在多大程度上解释了黑人患口腔癌的额外风险,我们计算了人群归因风险。
饮酒差异,尤其是在当前吸烟者中,成为最重要的解释变量。在调整吸烟因素后,大量饮酒(≥30杯/周)使黑人的风险增加了17倍,白人增加了9倍。在饮酒者中,黑人往往比白人饮酒更多。此外,当前吸烟者中黑人的比例(37%)高于白人(28%)(P = 0.01),尽管在其他吸烟变量(包括每日吸烟量、吸烟年限和开始吸烟年龄)的相对风险或使用模式方面几乎没有种族差异。从人群归因风险计算中,我们估计酒精和烟草使用的差异占美国黑人口腔癌发病率较高的大部分原因,并且在没有酒精和烟草的情况下,根据种族(黑人、白人)和性别的这种癌症发病率将几乎相等。关于其他潜在病因因素,较高的水果和维生素C饮食摄入量对白种人的保护作用更为明显,而黑人更常处于与风险增加相关的社会人口统计学和医疗或牙科健康类别中。
这些分析提供了证据,表明口腔癌的各种环境或生活方式决定因素可能导致美国黑人的口腔癌发病率高于白人,但与饮酒相关的模式和风险,尤其是在当前吸烟者中,是黑人额外风险的最重要因素。
这些发现表明,预防黑人和白人的口腔和咽癌的关键是减少酒精饮料的摄入量,并且由于强烈的交互作用,要戒烟。