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Tobacco and the risk of acute leukaemia in adults
Authors
A Engeland
A Kwiatkowski
+53 more
A Mele
CW Heath
DB Petitti
DP Sandler
DR Hay
E Roman
E V Kane
FP Perera
G Frenzilli
G Morgan
GC Kabat
GD Friedman
H Austin
H Shisa
J Adami
J Parker
JK McLaughlin
JK McLaughlin
JM Carstensen
L Garfinkel
LJ Kinlen
LM Brown
LM Brown
M Aksoy
M Siegel
MM Crane
MR Spitz
MS Linet
MW Hinds
N Bennett
NE Breslow
OM Jensen
P Hersey
P Pasqualetti
PG Smith
PK Mills
R Cartwright
R Ghosh
RA Cartwright
RA Rinsky
RC Brownson
RC Brownson
RC Brownson
RE Curtis
RJ Hardy
RJQ McNally
RK Severson
RK Severson
RR Williams
SD Hursting
SD Vesselinovitch
W Schmidt
WC Blackwelder
Publication date
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Doi
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
Self-reported smoking histories were collected during face-to-face interviews with 807 patients with acute leukaemia and 1593 age- and sex-matched controls. Individuals who had smoked regularly at some time during their lives were more likely to develop acute leukaemia than those who had never smoked (odds ratio (OR) = 1.2, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.0–1.4). The association was strongest for current smokers, defined here as smoking 2 years before diagnosis (OR = 1.4, 95% CI 1.1–1.7). With respect to the numbers of years smoked, risk estimates were raised in all groups except those who had smoked for fewer than 10 years. Similarly, the odds ratio decreased as the number of years ‘stopped smoking’ increased, falling to one amongst those who had given up smoking for more than 10 years. No significant linear trends were found, however, with either the numbers of years smoked or the numbers of years stopped smoking, and no significant differences were found between AML and ALL. © 1999 Cancer Research Campaig
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Last time updated on 03/12/2019