Smoking related lung cancer mortality by education and sex in Norway
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/17482Dato
2019-11-21Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Hansen, Merethe Selnes; Licaj, Idlir; Braaten, Tonje; Langhammer, Arnulf; Marchand, Loic Le; Gram, Inger TorhildSammendrag
Neither the most recent World Cancer Report [1] nor the United States Surgeon General Report [7] discuss a possible sex difference in the risk of smoking associated lung cancer mortality. In 2001, Tverdal reported that among Norwegians under 50 years of age, lung cancer mortality was higher in women than in men [8]. Later Jha et al. reported from a US cohort, that among current compared with never smokers, women had a higher lung cancer mortality compared with men [9]. Since men and women have entered the stages of the smoking epidemic at different calendar times [10], a possible sex difference for smoking and lung cancer mortality may just have started to emerge. Education, an indicator of socioeconomic status is inversely associated with cancer mortality [11, 12].
Studies from Europe have reported an increased risk of lung cancer in participants of low socioeconomic status despite accounting for smoking habits [13, 14]. To our knowledge, no other prospective cohort studies have examined lung cancer mortality by sex and education.
The objectives of the study were to explore a potential heterogeneity in smoking associated lung cancer mortality by sex and education.