Epithelial ovarian cancer subtypes attributable to smoking in the Norwegian Women and Cancer Study, 2012
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/9117Date
2016-01-14Type
Journal articlePeer reviewed
Tidsskriftartikkel
Abstract
Among European women, ovarian cancer is the fifth most common cancer.
Smoking is an established risk factor for mucinous tumors. We estimated the
impact of smoking in Norwegian women using population attributable fractions
(PAFs) of epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC), by invasiveness and by histological
subtypes in the Norwegian Women and Cancer Study with an average of 13.2 years
of follow-up. During >2 million person-years, a total of 915 incident EOC
cases, of which 667 (73%) invasive and 248 (27%) borderline, were identified
among 154,234 women aged 34–70 years at enrolment. Compared with never
smokers, current smokers had a nonstatistically significant increased risk of
mucinous tumors (hazard ratio [HR] = 1.67 [95% confidence interval, (CI),
0.96–2.96]) and more than twice statistically significant risk of borderline
mucinous tumors (HR = 2.17 [95% CI, 1.06–4.45]). The corresponding PAF
estimates were 16.5% for mucinous and 25% for borderline mucinous. We
found that among middle-aged women, one in six mucinous tumors and one
in four borderline mucinous tumors could have been prevented if women did
not smoke.
Description
DOI : 10.1002/cam4.590