Lung cancer and passive smoking: reconciling the biochemical and epidemiological approaches
Open Access
- 1 October 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in British Journal of Cancer
- Vol. 66 (4) , 700-705
- https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.1992.341
Abstract
The accurate determination of exposure to environmental tobacco smoke is notoriously difficult. There have been to date two approaches to determining this exposure in the study of association of passive smoking and lung cancer: the biochemical approach, using cotinine in the main as a marker, and the epidemiological approach. Typically results of the former have yielded much lower relative risk than the latter, and have tended to be ignored in favour of the latter, although there has been considerable debate as to the logical basis for this. We settle this question by showing that, using the epidemiologically based meta-analysis technique of Wald et al. (1986), and misclassification models in the EPA Draft Review (1990), one arrives using all current studies at a result which is virtually identical with the biochemically-based conclusions of Darby and Pike (1988) or Repace and Lowry (1990). The conduct of this meta-analysis itself raises a number of important methodological questions, including the validity of inclusion of studies, the use of estimates adjusted for covariates, and the statistical significance of estimates based on meta-analysis of the epidemiological data. The best estimate of relative risk from spousal smoking is shown to be approximately 1.05-1.10, based on either of these approaches; but it is suggested that considerable extra work is needed to establish whether this is significantly raised.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Lung cancer and passive smoking (continued)British Journal of Cancer, 1991
- Smoking and Other Risk Factors for Lung Cancer in Xuanwei, ChinaInternational Journal of Epidemiology, 1991
- Lung cancer and passive smokingBritish Journal of Cancer, 1991
- Lung cancer among women in north-east ChinaBritish Journal of Cancer, 1990
- Passive smoking and diet in the etiology of lung cancer among non-smoketsCancer Causes & Control, 1990
- Risk Assessment Methodologies for Passive Smoking‐Induced Lung Cancer1Risk Analysis, 1990
- Environmental Tobacco Smoke: Exposure‐Response Relationships in Epidemiologic StudiesRisk Analysis, 1990
- Lung cancer and passive smokingBritish Journal of Cancer, 1990
- Smoking and Passive Smoking in Relation to Lung Cancer in WomenActa Oncologica, 1989
- Smoking and Other Risk Factors for Lung Cancer in Women2JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1985