Current Oncology (Feb 2023)

Assessment of the Ecological Association between Tobacco Smoking Exposure and Bladder Cancer Incidence over the Past Half-Century in the United States

  • Thomas Seisen,
  • Muhieddine Labban,
  • Stuart R. Lipsitz,
  • Mark A. Preston,
  • Matthew Mossanen,
  • Joaquim Bellmunt,
  • Morgan Rouprêt,
  • Toni K. Choueiri,
  • Adam S. Kibel,
  • Maxine Sun,
  • Quoc-Dien Trinh

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol30020154
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30, no. 2
pp. 1986 – 1998

Abstract

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Background: Since tobacco smoking represents the most established risk factor for bladder cancer, we sought to assess the ecological association between tobacco smoking prevalence and bladder cancer incidence and to contrast it with lung cancer. Methods: The annual overall tobacco smoking prevalence rates were extracted from the Report of the Surgeon General and the Center for Disease Control between 1953 and 1983. The overall age-adjusted incidence rates for bladder and lung cancers were derived from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results database between 1983 and 2013 (30-year latency period). Weighted least square regression models were used to assess bladder and lung cancer incidence rate differences (IRD) related to trends in tobacco smoking prevalence. A Wald test was used to compare whether the prevalence of tobacco smoking, as an explanatory variable, differentially predicts bladder versus lung cancer incidence rates. Results: The associations between tobacco smoking prevalence and bladder cancer incidence were not significant in the overall (IRD = +0.04; 95%CI (−0.14; +0.22); p = 0.63), male (IRD = +0.07; 95%CI (−0.09; +0.23); p = 0.37), or female (IRD = +0.12; 95%CI (−0.01; +0.25); p = 0.06) populations. There was an association between tobacco smoking prevalence and lung cancer incidence in the overall (IRD: +3.55; 95%CI ( +3.09; +4.00); p p p p < 0.001). Conclusions: Variations in tobacco smoking prevalence only partially explained the trends in the incidence of bladder cancer, indicating that its etiology is complex.

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