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Asthma and lung cancer risk: a systematic investigation by the International Lung Cancer Consortium
ISSN
1460-2180
0143-3334
Date Issued
2012
Author(s)
McCormack, Valerie
Brenner, Darren R.
Duell, Eric J.
Tjonneland, Anne
Friis, Soren
Muscat, Joshua E.
Yang, Ping
Wichmann, H-Erich
Heinrich, Joachim
Szeszenia-Dabrowska, Neonila
Lissowska, Jolanta
Zaridze, David
Rudnai, Peter
Fabianova, Eleonora
Janout, Vladimir
Bencko, Vladimir
Brennan, P. C.
Mates, Dana
Schwartz, Ann G.
Cote, Michele L.
Zhang, Z.
Morgenstern, Hal
Oh, Sam S.
Field, John K.
Raji, Olaide Y.
McLaughlin, John R.
Wiencke, John K.
LeMarchand, Loic
Neri, Monica
Bonassi, Stefano
Andrew, Angeline S.
Lan, Qing
Hu, Wei
Orlow, Irene
Park, Bernard J.
Boffetta, Paolo
Hung, Rayjean J.
DOI
10.1093/carcin/bgr307
Abstract
Asthma has been hypothesized to be associated with lung cancer (LC) risk. We conducted a pooled analysis of 16 studies in the International Lung Cancer Consortium (ILCCO) to quantitatively assess this association and compared the results with 36 previously published studies. In total, information from 585 444 individuals was used. Study-specific measures were combined using random effects models. A meta-regression and subgroup meta-analyses were performed to identify sources of heterogeneity. The overall LC relative risk (RR) associated with asthma was 1.28 [95% confidence intervals (CIs) = 1.16-1.41] but with large heterogeneity (I-2 = 73%, P < 0.001) between studies. Among ILCCO studies, an increased risk was found for squamous cell (RR = 1.69, 95%, CI = 1.26-2.26) and for small-cell carcinoma (RR = 1.71, 95% CI = 0.99-2.95) but was weaker for adenocarcinoma (RR = 1.09, 95% CI = 0.88-1.36). The increased LC risk was strongest in the 2 years after asthma diagnosis (RR = 2.13, 95% CI = 1.09-4.17) but subjects diagnosed with asthma over 10 years prior had no or little increased LC risk (RR = 1.10, 95% CI = 0.94-1.30). Because the increased incidence of LC was chiefly observed in small cell and squamous cell lung carcinomas, primarily within 2 years of asthma diagnosis and because the association was weak among never smokers, we conclude that the association may not reflect a causal effect of asthma on the risk of LC.