Leanness and Lung Cancer Risk: Fact or Artifact?
- 1 May 2002
- journal article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Epidemiology
- Vol. 13 (3) , 268-276
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00001648-200205000-00006
Abstract
More than a dozen studies have examined the association between leanness and increased lung cancer risk. None of the prospective studies has been large enough to allow exclusion of smokers or persons with preexisting disease, two factors that cause both leanness and poor survival and thus may cause a spurious association between low body mass index and fatal lung cancer. Using Cox proportional hazards models, we examined this issue in a cohort of 941,105 U.S. adults enrolled in an American Cancer Society prospective study in 1982. During 14 years of follow-up, 14,066 people died of lung cancer. In analyses restricted to lifelong nonsmokers who did not report preexisting disease, leanness was not substantially associated with lung cancer mortality in men (rate ratio = 0.9; 95% confidence interval = 0.3-3.1) or in women (rate ratio = 1.2; 95% confidence interval = 0.7-2.1). However, leanness was associated with increased lung cancer risk in analyses that attempted to control for, rather than exclude, smokers and persons with preexisting disease. These data suggest that the association between leanness and lung cancer mortality is not causal but rather is an artifact of the effects of smoking and preexisting disease.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Variations in mortality by weight among 750,000 men and womenPublished by Elsevier ,2004
- Body-Mass Index and Mortality in a Prospective Cohort of U.S. AdultsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1999
- A prospective study of weight, body mass index and other anthropometric measurements in relation to site‐specific cancersInternational Journal of Cancer, 1994
- Body Weight and MortalityNutrition Reviews, 1993
- Relation of body size and the risk of lung cancerNutrition and Cancer, 1993
- Smoking-Attributable Cancer Mortality in 1991: Is Lung Cancer Now the Leading Cause of Death Among Smokers in the United States?JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1991
- Body weight and mortality in middle aged British men: impact of smoking.BMJ, 1989
- Body mass index at the age of 18 and its effects on 32-year-mortality from coronary heart disease and cancer A nested case-control study among the entire 1932 Dutch male birth cohortJournal of Clinical Epidemiology, 1989
- Thinness and mortality.American Journal of Public Health, 1987
- Caloric intake, body weight, and cancer: A reviewNutrition and Cancer, 1987