Breast cancer, prostate cancer, and even routine infections. A new
report ties these and other maladies to smoking and says an additional
60,000 to 120,000 deaths each year in the United States are probably due
to tobacco use.
The study by the American Cancer Society and several universities,
published in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine, looks beyond
lung cancer, heart disease and other conditions already tied to smoking,
and the 480,000 U.S. deaths attributed to them each year.
"Smokers die, on average, more than a decade before nonsmokers," and
in the U.S., smoking accounts for one of every five deaths, Dr. Graham
Colditz, an epidemiologist at Washington University School of Medicine
in St. Louis wrote in a commentary in the journal.
The report shows that current estimates "have substantially underestimated the burden of smoking on society," he wrote.
About 18 percent of U.S. adults smoke.
More about the report:
Where do the numbers come from?
Researchers looked at nearly 1 million Americans 55 and older taking
part in five studies, including the National Institutes of Health-AARP
Diet and Health Study, since 2000. They tracked the participants' health
for about 10 years and compared deaths from various causes among
smokers, never smokers and former smokers, taking into account other
things that can influence risk such as alcohol use.
The big picture
Death rates were two to three times higher among current smokers than
among people who never smoked. Most of the excess deaths in smokers
were due to 21 diseases already tied to smoking, including 12 types of
cancer, heart disease and stroke. But researchers also saw death rates
in smokers were twice as high from other conditions such as kidney
failure, infections, liver cirrhosis and some respiratory diseases not
previously tied to smoking.
What about breast and prostate cancer?
The report strengthens evidence tying them to smoking. It finds that
female smokers' risk of dying of breast cancer is 30 percent greater
than for nonsmokers. Male smokers have a 40 percent greater risk of
dying of prostate cancer than nonsmokers do, the researchers found.
How do they know smoking was the cause?
One strong sign is that the risk of dying of these other conditions
declined among people who quit smoking. The longer ago they stopped, the
greater the drop in risk as time went on.
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