Improving Utility of Data on Cancer Mortality Risk Associated with Smokeless Tobacco: Recommendations for Future Research


Journal

Asian Pacific journal of cancer prevention : APJCP
ISSN: 2476-762X
Titre abrégé: Asian Pac J Cancer Prev
Pays: Thailand
ID NLM: 101130625

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
26 Feb 2019
Historique:
entrez: 27 2 2019
pubmed: 26 2 2019
medline: 10 7 2019
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Background: We analyzed in detail the studies utilized in most recent global systematic review of risk of cancer mortality with smokeless tobacco (SLT) use to report challenges in the available data that limit the understanding of association between SLT use and cancer mortality. Methods: For each study, we documented study design, reporting of mortality risk by type of SLT variant, SLT use frequency, and sex of SLT user for oral, oesophageal, pharyngeal, laryngeal and orolaryngeal cancers. These findings are discussed within the context of prevalence of SLT use by geographic regions and sex. Results: Majority of studies reported mortality risk for oral (70.6%) followed by oesophageal cancer (38.2%). The availability of population-based evidence was low (35.3%). The geographic distribution of studies did not reflect the geographic distribution of countries with high SLT consumption; 61.8% of the studies were from India followed by Sweden (20.6%). Hospital-based (84.2%) studies reported risk with chewing tobacco and the population-based studies (61.5%) with non-chewing tobacco. Hardly any study reported on a particular type of SLT. Definition of SLT use as current, ever or former was limited without consideration of the wide variations in frequency and duration of use within these patterns. Mortality risk reporting for males dominated all cancers other than oral (50% males). Conclusions: Unless the methodological and generalizability challenges identified in this review are addressed in future research to develop a stronger scientific basis of the association of SLT use and cancer mortality, we would continue to face significant challenges in monitoring the health effects of SLT.

Identifiants

pubmed: 30803225
doi: 10.31557/APJCP.2019.20.2.581
pmc: PMC6897011

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

581-588

Informations de copyright

Creative Commons Attribution License

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Auteurs

Rakhi Dandona (R)

Public Health Foundation of India, Gurugram, National Capital Region, India.
Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, University of Washington, Seattle, USA. Email: rakhi.dandona@phfi.org

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Classifications MeSH