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Air pollution and risk of lung cancer in a prospective study in Europe
Authors:Vineis Paolo  Hoek Gerard  Krzyzanowski Michal  Vigna-Taglianti Federica  Veglia Fabrizio  Airoldi Luisa  Autrup Herman  Dunning Alison  Garte Seymour  Hainaut Pierre  Malaveille Christian  Matullo Giuseppe  Overvad Kim  Raaschou-Nielsen Ole  Clavel-Chapelon Francoise  Linseisen Jacob  Boeing Heiner  Trichopoulou Antonia  Palli Domenico  Peluso Marco  Krogh Vittorio  Tumino Rosario  Panico Salvatore  Bueno-De-Mesquita H Bas  Peeters Petra H  Lund E Eylin  Gonzalez Carlos A  Martinez Carmen  Dorronsoro Miren  Barricarte Aurelio  Cirera Lluis  Quiros J Ramon  Berglund Goran  Forsberg Bertil  Day Nicholas E  Key Tim J
Affiliation:Imperial College London, London, UK. p.vineis@imperial.ac.uk
Abstract:To estimate the relationship between air pollution and lung cancer, a nested case-control study was set up within EPIC (European Prospective Investigation on Cancer and Nutrition). Cases had newly diagnosed lung cancer, accrued after a median follow-up of 7 years among the EPIC ex-smokers (since at least 10 years) and never smokers. Three controls per case were matched. Matching criteria were gender, age (+/-5 years), smoking status, country of recruitment and time elapsed between recruitment and diagnosis. We studied residence in proximity of heavy traffic roads as an indicator of exposure to air pollution. In addition, exposure to air pollutants (NO(2), PM10, SO(2)) was assessed using concentration data from monitoring stations in routine air quality monitoring networks. Cotinine was measured in plasma. We found a nonsignificant association between lung cancer and residence nearby heavy traffic roads (odds ratio = 1.46, 95% confidence interval, CI, 0.89-2.40). Exposure data for single pollutants were available for 197 cases and 556 matched controls. For NO(2) we found an odds ratio of 1.14 (95% CI, 0.78-1.67) for each increment of 10 microg/m(3), and an odds ratio of 1.30 (1.02-1.66) for concentrations greater than 30 microg/m(3). The association with NO(2) did not change after adjustment by cotinine and additional potential confounders, including occupational exposures. No clear association was found with other pollutants.
Keywords:air pollution  lung cancer  prospective study
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