2/7/06

Why do African- and Hawaiian-Americans have a higher risk of lung cancer?
This article is illuminated by an accompanying background article in the Journal. See here, if you have NEJM access.

Ethnic and Racial Differences in the Smoking-Related Risk of Lung Cancer

Christopher A. Haiman, Sc.D., Daniel O. Stram, Ph.D., Lynne R. Wilkens, Dr.P.H., Malcolm C. Pike, Ph.D., Laurence N. Kolonel, M.D., Ph.D., Brian E. Henderson, M.D., and Loïc Le Marchand, M.D., Ph.D.

ABSTRACT

Background There is remarkable variation in the incidence of lung cancer among ethnic and racial groups in the United States.

Methods We investigated differences in the risk of lung cancer associated with cigarette smoking among 183,813 African-American, Japanese-American, Latino, Native Hawaiian, and white men and women in the Multiethnic Cohort Study. Our analysis included 1979 cases of incident lung cancer identified prospectively over an eight-year period, between baseline (1993 through 1996) and 2001.

Results The risk of lung cancer among ethnic and racial groups was modified by the number of cigarettes smoked per day. Among participants who smoked no more than 30 cigarettes per day, African Americans and Native Hawaiians had significantly greater risks of lung cancer than did the other groups. Among those who smoked no more than 10 and those who smoked 11 to 20 cigarettes per day, relative risks ranged from 0.21 to 0.39 (P<0.001) among Japanese Americans and Latinos and from 0.45 to 0.57 (P<0.001) among whites, as compared with African Americans. However, at levels exceeding 30 cigarettes per day, these differences were not significant. Differences in risk associated with smoking were observed among both men and women and for all histologic types of lung cancer.

Conclusions Among cigarette smokers, African Americans and Native Hawaiians are more susceptible to lung cancer than whites, Japanese Americans, and Latinos.

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