| Literature DB >> 34029359 |
Thomas Gredner1,2, Ute Mons1,3,4, Tobias Niedermaier1, Hermann Brenner1,5,6, Isabelle Soerjomataram7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite recent trends in declining smoking rates, tobacco smoking remains the most preventable cause of cancer in Europe. We aimed to estimate numbers and proportions of future lung cancer cases that could be potentially prevented over a 20-year period if countries in Europe were to achieve a comprehensive implementation of tobacco control policies.Entities:
Keywords: APC, Age-period-cohort; FCTC, Framework Convention on Tobacco Control; ICD, International classification of diseases; Lung cancer; PIF, Potential impact fraction; Potential impact fraction; Prevention; TCS, Tobacco Control Scale; Tobacco control; WHO, World Health Organization; ci5plus, Cancer incidence in five continents
Year: 2021 PMID: 34029359 PMCID: PMC8121752 DOI: 10.1016/j.lanepe.2021.100074
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lancet Reg Health Eur ISSN: 2666-7762
Age-standardised smoking prevalence (35+ years), Tobacco Control Scale (TCS) scores in 2016, estimated number of cases and age-standardised incidence rates for lung cancer in 2017 in Europe by sex.
| Region/country | Smoking prevalence | TCS | Lung cancer cases | Incidence rate per 100,000 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Men | Women | Men | Women | Men | Women | ||
| 27·4 | 20·2 | 227,030 | 126,520 | 123·2 | 69·8 | ||
| 34·4 | 22·3 | 40,170 | 17,460 | 140·8 | 51·7 | ||
| Bulgaria | 45·4 | 26·7 | 47 | 3250 | 790 | 138·4 | 30·5 |
| Czech Republic | 32·3 | 19·6 | 40 | 4320 | 2410 | 123·2 | 65·7 |
| Hungary | 29·5 | 20·3 | 53 | 6480 | 4560 | 185·1 | 101·1 |
| Poland | 35·7 | 25·3 | 50 | 15,290 | 6110 | 138·1 | 47·6 |
| Romania | 33·8 | 18·8 | 56 | 8830 | 2710 | 136·4 | 35·8 |
| Slovakia | 26·3 | 17·8 | 41 | 2010 | 880 | 136·8 | 52·0 |
| 32·3 | 21·1 | 60,600 | 25,940 | 119·0 | 51·4 | ||
| Cyprus | 39·0 | 15·2 | 44 | 400 | 120 | 126·8 | 38·6 |
| Greece | 42·8 | 35·8 | 40 | 6660 | 1940 | 138·1 | 38·3 |
| Italy | 32·3 | 16·8 | 51 | 28,266 | 14,910 | 112·4 | 62·6 |
| Malta | 32·3 | 16·5 | 51 | 150 | 100 | 96·0 | 71·5 |
| Portugal | 29·8 | 17·3 | 50 | 3480 | 1240 | 86·2 | 24·2 |
| Slovenia | 30·9 | 21·8 | 43 | 790 | 460 | 110·1 | 63·0 |
| Spain | 30·4 | 23·7 | 55 | 20,860 | 7180 | 130·3 | 45·7 |
| 26·4 | 20·8 | 86,640 | 49,410 | 127·2 | 74·3 | ||
| Austria | 34·1 | 22·7 | 36 | 3010 | 2100 | 100·7 | 70·8 |
| Belgium | 23·4 | 17·6 | 49 | 5680 | 2860 | 148·3 | 78·8 |
| France | 41·0 | 31·6 | 64 | 31,580 | 13,770 | 146·9 | 64·5 |
| Germany | 26·8 | 22·1 | 37 | 36,530 | 22,320 | 114·8 | 73·8 |
| Luxembourg | 27·0 | 12·3 | 37 | 210 | 120 | 86·4 | 54·7 |
| Netherlands | 21·7 | 16·5 | 53 | 7880 | 6150 | 129·3 | 112·2 |
| Switzerland | 28·9 | 20·8 | 46 | 2760 | 2100 | 93·9 | 76·8 |
| 16·3 | 15·6 | 38,620 | 33,700 | 105·9 | 101·0 | ||
| Denmark | 19·6 | 18·3 | 45 | 2500 | 2560 | 119·9 | 136·5 |
| Estonia | 31·7 | 14·9 | 46 | 550 | 210 | 146·4 | 40·7 |
| Finland | 24·6 | 15·1 | 60 | 1800 | 1060 | 86·0 | 51·8 |
| Iceland | 13·3 | 12·6 | 69 | 70 | 100 | 73·3 | 120·1 |
| Ireland | 18·1 | 15·9 | 70 | 1520 | 1280 | 113·7 | 107·3 |
| Latvia | 48·2 | 21·9 | 44 | 880 | 220 | 125·0 | 25·9 |
| Lithuania | 43·5 | 17·8 | 43 | 1090 | 310 | 134·1 | 27·0 |
| Norway | 22·0 | 17·4 | 63 | 1770 | 1560 | 101·7 | 102·0 |
| Sweden | 4·9 | 9·7 | 53 | 2090 | 2240 | 55·9 | 69·4 |
| United Kingdom | 14·0 | 15·9 | 81 | 26,350 | 24,160 | 111·5 | 113·2 |
Age-standardised smoking prevalence for Europe and the European regions were calculated by weighting according to population sizes.
Fig. 1Age-standardised smoking prevalence in 2017 and estimated hypothetical prevalence with the highest-level of tobacco control policies (TCP) implementation (measured by the Tobacco Control Scale), by sex and country.
Predicted and preventable number (#) and proportions (%) of lung cancer cases by highest-level implementation of tobacco control policies over a 20-year period (2018–2037) and in 2037 in Europe by sex.
| Region/Country | Predicted lung cancer cases in 2018–2037 | Preventable lung cancer cases in 2018–2037 | Preventable lung cancer cases in 2037 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Men | Women | Men | Women | Men | Women | |
| # | # | # (%) | # (%) | # (%) | # (%) | |
| 4718,000 | 3095,000 | 935,000 (19·8) | 718,000 (23·2) | 83,000 (34·2) | 66,000 (38·9) | |
| 742,000 | 400,000 | 154,000 (20·7) | 103,000 (25·7) | 13,000 (37·7) | 9000 (44·1) | |
| Bulgaria | 58,400 | 17,600 | 12,600 (21·6) | 4700 (26·8) | 1000 (40·0) | 400 (46·4) |
| Czech Republic | 77,700 | 54,800 | 19,300 (24·8) | 16,800 (30·6) | 1600 (45·3) | 1500 (52·6) |
| Hungary | 116,400 | 102,900 | 22,500 (19·3) | 24,600 (23·9) | 1800 (35·4) | 2100 (41·2) |
| Poland | 282,700 | 141,100 | 59,000 (20·9) | 36,000 (25·5) | 5000 (37·7) | 3100 (43·9) |
| Romania | 165,300 | 62,100 | 30,000 (18·1) | 13,900 (22·4) | 2400 (33·1) | 1200 (38·4) |
| Slovakia | 41,600 | 21,900 | 10,600 (25·5) | 6700 (30·8) | 900 (44·4) | 600 (51·6) |
| 1264,000 | 678,000 | 271,000 (21·5) | 177,000 (26·1) | 24,000 (37·0) | 17,000 (42·8) | |
| Cyprus | 12,100 | 3400 | 3200 (26·8) | 1100 (30·6) | 300 (42·2) | 100 (48·9) |
| Greece | 142,500 | 52,800 | 37,700 (26·4) | 17,100 (32·4) | 3400 (45·3) | 1600 (52·6) |
| Italy | 551,600 | 365,700 | 116,300 (21·1) | 94,300 (25·8) | 10,400 (37·0) | 8800 (43·0) |
| Malta | 3100 | 3500 | 650 (21·0) | 1000 (27·6) | 50 (37·0) | 100 (42·6) |
| Portugal | 77,700 | 30,900 | 17,200 (22·1) | 8200 (26·4) | 1600 (37·7) | 800 (43·8) |
| Slovenia | 14,800 | 10,500 | 3600 (24·0) | 3100 (29·1) | 300 (43·1) | 300 (49·9) |
| Spain | 462,600 | 211,200 | 92,700 (20·0) | 52,100 (24·6) | 8430 (34·0) | 5100 (39·5) |
| 1851,000 | 1196,000 | 409,000 (22·1) | 333,000 (27·2) | 37,000 (38·3) | 30,000 (45·6) | |
| Austria | 66,800 | 53,400 | 19,100 (28·5) | 18,100 (33·9) | 1800 (48·4) | 1700 (56·1) |
| Belgium | 119,800 | 72,500 | 26,700 (22·3) | 19,400 (26·7) | 2400 (38·5) | 1700 (44·7) |
| France | 672,600 | 359,200 | 105,000 (15·6) | 68,300 (19·0) | 9200 (27·1) | 6400 (31·5) |
| Germany | 749,900 | 543,400 | 205,200 (27·4) | 178,200 (32·8) | 18,500 (47·5) | 16,100 (55·2) |
| Luxembourg | 4300 | 2900 | 1200 (27·9) | 1000 (33·2) | 100 (47·4) | < 100 (55·0) |
| Netherlands | 178,900 | 143,400 | 37,600 (21·0) | 34,300 (23·9) | 3500 (35·5) | 3000 (41·2) |
| Switzerland | 58,200 | 50,300 | 13,800 (23·7) | 14,100 (28·0) | 1200 (40·8) | 1300 (47·3) |
| 861,000 | 791,000 | 101,000 (11·8) | 106,000 (13·4) | 9000 (19·6) | 10,000 (22·4) | |
| Denmark | 52,700 | 55,000 | 12,600 (23·9) | 15,200 (27·6) | 1100 (41·6) | 1300 (48·3) |
| Estonia | 10,000 | 4600 | 2200 (22·4) | 1300 (27·5) | 200 (40·7) | 100 (47·4) |
| Finland | 38,000 | 26,500 | 6600 (17·4) | 5600 (21·0) | 600 (30·2) | 500 (35·2) |
| Iceland | 1500 | 2400 | 200 (13·6) | 400 (16·1) | < 100 (23·4) | < 100 (27·2) |
| Ireland | 38,600 | 35,600 | 5400 (13·9) | 5800 (16·4) | 500 (22·6) | 600 (26·3) |
| Latvia | 14,500 | 4700 | 3200 (22·3) | 1300 (28·1) | 300 (42·2) | 100 (49·0) |
| Lithuania | 19,000 | 6900 | 4400 (23·3) | 2000 (29·5) | 400 (43·0) | 200 (50·0) |
| Norway | 40,600 | 35,900 | 6700 (16·5) | 6800 (18·9) | 600 (27·9) | 600 (32·5) |
| Sweden | 41,200 | 46,100 | 8200 (19·9) | 10,600 (23·0) | 700 (35·5) | 900 (41·2) |
| United Kingdom | 605,000 | 573,500 | 51,900 (8·6) | 56,800 (9·9) | 4900 (14·4) | 5200 (16·7) |
Fig. 2aObserved and predicted age-standardised lung cancer incidence rates (per 100,000) among men by country in Europe. In Black (straight): Predicted rates if historical changes were to continue; In Blue (dashed): Predicted rates if the highest level of tobacco control policies were implemented. Dashed vertical gray line indicates baseline year 2017.
Fig. 2bObserved and predicted age-standardised lung cancer incidence rates (per 100,000) among women by country in Europe. In Black (straight): Predicted rates if historical changes were to continue; In Red (dashed): Predicted rates if the highest level of tobacco control policies were implemented. Dashed vertical gray line indicates baseline year 2017.