| Literature DB >> 28120396 |
Gordon Fehringer1, Darren R Brenner1,2,3, Zuo-Feng Zhang4, Yuan-Chin Amy Lee5, Keitaro Matsuo6, Hidemi Ito7, Qing Lan8, Paolo Vineis9, Mattias Johansson2, Kim Overvad10, Elio Riboli11, Antonia Trichopoulou12,13, Carlotta Sacerdote14, Isabelle Stucker15, Paolo Boffetta16, Paul Brennan2, David C Christiani17, Yun-Chul Hong18, Maria Teresa Landi8, Hal Morgenstern19, Ann G Schwartz20, Angela S Wenzlaff20, Gad Rennert21, John R McLaughlin22, Curtis C Harris23, Susan Olivo-Marston24, Irene Orlow25, Bernard J Park26, Marjorie Zauderer27,28, Juan M Barros Dios29,30, Alberto Ruano Raviña29,30, Jack Siemiatycki31, Anita Koushik31, Philip Lazarus32, Ana Fernández-Somoano33, Adonina Tardon33, Loic Le Marchand34, Hermann Brenner35,36,37, Kai-Uwe Saum35, Eric J Duell38, Angeline S Andrew39, Neonila Szeszenia-Dabrowska40, Jolanta Lissowska41, David Zaridze42, Peter Rudnai43, Eleonora Fabianova44, Dana Mates45, Lenka Foretova46, Vladimir Janout47, Vladimir Bencko48, Ivana Holcatova48, Angela Cecilia Pesatori49,50, Dario Consonni49, Ann Olsson2,51, Kurt Straif2, Rayjean J Hung1.
Abstract
It is not clear whether alcohol consumption is associated with lung cancer risk. The relationship is likely confounded by smoking, complicating the interpretation of previous studies. We examined the association of alcohol consumption and lung cancer risk in a large pooled international sample, minimizing potential confounding of tobacco consumption by restricting analyses to never smokers. Our study included 22 case-control and cohort studies with a total of 2548 never-smoking lung cancer patients and 9362 never-smoking controls from North America, Europe and Asia within the International Lung Cancer Consortium (ILCCO) and SYNERGY Consortium. Alcohol consumption was categorized into amounts consumed (grams per day) and also modelled as a continuous variable using restricted cubic splines for potential non-linearity. Analyses by histologic sub-type were included. Associations by type of alcohol consumed (wine, beer and liquor) were also investigated. Alcohol consumption was inversely associated with lung cancer risk with evidence most strongly supporting lower risk for light and moderate drinkers relative to non-drinkers (>0-4.9 g per day: OR = 0.80, 95% CI = 0.70-0.90; 5-9.9 g per day: OR = 0.82, 95% CI = 0.69-0.99; 10-19.9 g per day: OR = 0.79, 95% CI = 0.65-0.96). Inverse associations were found for consumption of wine and liquor, but not beer. The results indicate that alcohol consumption is inversely associated with lung cancer risk, particularly among subjects with low to moderate consumption levels, and among wine and liquor drinkers, but not beer drinkers. Although our results should have no relevant bias from the confounding effect of smoking we cannot preclude that confounding by other factors contributed to the observed associations. Confounding in relation to the non-drinker reference category may be of particular importance.Entities:
Keywords: alcohol; beer; liquor; lung cancer; wine
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28120396 PMCID: PMC5356930 DOI: 10.1002/ijc.30618
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Cancer ISSN: 0020-7136 Impact factor: 7.396