Tobacco smoking and risks of more than 470 diseases in China: a prospective cohort study. (December 2022)
- Record Type:
- Journal Article
- Title:
- Tobacco smoking and risks of more than 470 diseases in China: a prospective cohort study. (December 2022)
- Main Title:
- Tobacco smoking and risks of more than 470 diseases in China: a prospective cohort study
- Authors:
- Chan, Ka Hung
Wright, Neil
Xiao, Dan
Guo, Yu
Chen, Yiping
Du, Huaidong
Yang, Ling
Millwood, Iona Y
Pei, Pei
Wang, Junzheng
Turnbull, Iain
Gilbert, Simon
Avery, Daniel
Kartsonaki, Christiana
Yu, Canqing
Chen, Junshi
Lv, Jun
Clarke, Robert
Collins, Rory
Peto, Richard
Li, Liming
Wang, Chen
Chen, Zhengming
Avery, Daniel
Bennett, Derrick
Boxall, Ruth
Burgess, Sushila
Chan, Peter Ka Hung
Chen, Yiping
Chen, Zhengming
Clarke, Johnathan
Clarke, Robert
Du, Huaidong
Mohamed, Ahmed Edris
Fry, Hannah
Gilbert, Simon
Hill, Mike
Im, Becky Pek Kei
Iona, Andri
Kakkoura, Maria
Kartsonaki, Christiana
Lam, Hubert
Lin, Kuang
Mazidi, Mohsen
Millwood, Iona Y
Morris, Sam
Nie, Qunhua
Pozarickij, Alfred
Ryder, Paul
Said, Saredo
Schmidt, Dan
Sherliker, Paul
Stevens, Rebecca
Turnbull, Iain
Walters, Robin
Wang, Lin
Wright, Neil
Yang, Ling
Yang, Xiaoming
Yao, Pang
Guo, Yu
Han, Xiao
Hou, Can
Xia, Qingmei
Liu, Chao
Lv, Jun
Pei, Pei
Yu, Canqing
Chen, Junshi
Chen, Zhengming
Clarke, Robert
Collins, Rory
Guo, Yu
Li, Liming
Wang, Chen
Lv, Jun
Peto, Richard
Walters, Robin
Chen, Naying
Liu, Duo
Tang, Zhenzhu
Chen, Ningyu
Jiang, Qilian
Lan, Jian
Li, Mingqiang
Liu, Yun
Meng, Fanwen
Meng, Jinhuai
Pan, Rong
Qin, Yulu
Wang, Ping
Wang, Sisi
Wei, Liuping
Zhou, Liyuan
Dong, Caixia
Ge, Pengfei
Ren, Xiaolan
Li, Zhongxiao
Mao, Enke
Wang, Tao
Zhang, Hui
Zhang, Xi
Chen, Jinyan
Hu, Ximin
Wang, Xiaohuan
Guo, Zhendong
Li, Huimei
Li, Yilei
Weng, Min
Wu, Shukuan
Yan, Shichun
Zou, Mingyuan
Zhou, Xue
Guo, Ziyan
Kang, Quan
Li, Yanjie
Yu, Bo
Xu, Qinai
Chang, Liang
Fan, Lei
Feng, Shixian
Zhang, Ding
Zhou, Gang
Gao, Yulian
He, Tianyou
He, Pan
Hu, Chen
Sun, Huarong
Zhang, Xukui
Chen, Biyun
Fu, Zhongxi
Huang, Yuelong
Liu, Huilin
Xu, Qiaohua
Yin, Li
Long, Huajun
Xu, Xin
Zhang, Hao
Zhang, Libo
Su, Jian
Tao, Ran
Wu, Ming
Yang, Jie
Zhou, Jinyi
Zhou, Yonglin
Hu, Yihe
Hua, Yujie
Jin, Jianrong
Liu, Fang
Liu, Jingchao
Lu, Yan
Ma, Liangcai
Tang, Aiyu
Zhang, Jun
Cheng, Liang
Du, Ranran
Gao, Ruqin
Li, Feifei
Li, Shanpeng
Liu, Yongmei
Ning, Feng
Pang, Zengchang
Sun, Xiaohui
Tian, Xiaocao
Wang, Shaojie
Zhai, Yaoming
Zhang, Hua
Hou, Wei
Lv, Silu
Wang, Junzheng
Chen, Xiaofang
Wu, Xianping
Zhang, Ningmei
Zhou, Weiwei
Chen, Xiaofang
Li, Jianguo
Liu, Jiaqiu
Luo, Guojin
Sun, Qiang
Zhong, Xunfu
Gong, Weiwei
Hu, Ruying
Wang, Hao
Wang, Meng
Yu, Min
Chen, Lingli
Gu, Qijun
Pan, Dongxia
Wang, Chunmei
Xie, Kaixu
Zhang, Xiaoyi
… (more) - Abstract:
- Summary: Background: Tobacco smoking is estimated to account for more than 1 million annual deaths in China, and the epidemic continues to increase in men. Large nationwide prospective studies linked to different health records can help to periodically assess disease burden attributed to smoking. We aimed to examine associations of smoking with incidence of and mortality from an extensive range of diseases in China. Methods: We analysed data from the prospective China Kadoorie Biobank, which recruited 512 726 adults aged 30–79 years, of whom 210 201 were men and 302 525 were women. Participants who had no major disabilities were identified through local residential records in 100–150 administrative units, which were randomly selected by use of multistage cluster sampling, from each of the ten diverse study areas of China. They were invited and recruited between June 25, 2004, and July 15, 2008. Upon study entry, trained health workers administered a questionnaire assessing detailed smoking behaviours and other key characteristics (eg, sociodemographics, lifestyle, and medical history). Participants were followed up via electronic record linkages to death and disease registries and health insurance databases, from baseline to Jan 1, 2018. During a median 11-year follow-up (IQR 10–12), 285 542 (55·7%) participants were ever hospitalised, 48 869 (9·5%) died, and 5252 (1·0%) were lost to follow-up during the age-at-risk of 35–84 years. Cox regression yielded hazard ratios (HRs)Summary: Background: Tobacco smoking is estimated to account for more than 1 million annual deaths in China, and the epidemic continues to increase in men. Large nationwide prospective studies linked to different health records can help to periodically assess disease burden attributed to smoking. We aimed to examine associations of smoking with incidence of and mortality from an extensive range of diseases in China. Methods: We analysed data from the prospective China Kadoorie Biobank, which recruited 512 726 adults aged 30–79 years, of whom 210 201 were men and 302 525 were women. Participants who had no major disabilities were identified through local residential records in 100–150 administrative units, which were randomly selected by use of multistage cluster sampling, from each of the ten diverse study areas of China. They were invited and recruited between June 25, 2004, and July 15, 2008. Upon study entry, trained health workers administered a questionnaire assessing detailed smoking behaviours and other key characteristics (eg, sociodemographics, lifestyle, and medical history). Participants were followed up via electronic record linkages to death and disease registries and health insurance databases, from baseline to Jan 1, 2018. During a median 11-year follow-up (IQR 10–12), 285 542 (55·7%) participants were ever hospitalised, 48 869 (9·5%) died, and 5252 (1·0%) were lost to follow-up during the age-at-risk of 35–84 years. Cox regression yielded hazard ratios (HRs) associating smoking with disease incidence and mortality, adjusting for multiple testing. Findings: At baseline, 74·3% of men and 3·2% of women (overall 32·4%) ever smoked regularly. During follow-up, 1 137 603 International Classification of Diseases, 10th revision (ICD-10)-coded incident events occurred, involving 476 distinct conditions and 85 causes of death, each with at least 100 cases. Compared with never-regular smokers, ever-regular smokers had significantly higher risks for nine of 18 ICD-10 chapters examined at age-at-risk of 35–84 years. For individual conditions, smokers had significantly higher risks of 56 diseases (50 for men and 24 for women) and 22 causes of death (17 for men and nine for women). Among men, ever-regular smokers had an HR of 1·09 (95% CI 1·08–1·11) for any disease incidence when compared with never-regular smokers, and significantly more episodes and longer duration of hospitalisation, particularly those due to cancer and respiratory diseases. For overall mortality, the HRs were greater in men from urban areas than in men from rural areas (1·50 [1·42–1·58] vs 1·25 [1·20–1·30]). Among men from urban areas who began smoking at younger than 18 years, the HRs were 2·06 (1·89–2·24) for overall mortality and 1·32 (1·27–1·37) for any disease incidence. In this population, 19·6% of male (24·3% of men residing in urban settings and 16·2% of men residing in rural settings) and 2·8% of female deaths were attributed to ever-regular smoking. Interpretation: Among Chinese adults, smoking was associated with higher risks of morbidity and mortality from a wide range of diseases. Among men, the future smoking-attributed disease burden will increase further, highlighting a pressing need for reducing consumption through widespread cessation and uptake prevention. Funding: British Heart Foundation, Cancer Research UK, Chinese Ministry of Science and Technology, Kadoorie Charitable Foundation, UK Medical Research Council, National Natural Science Foundation of China, Wellcome Trust. … (more)
- Is Part Of:
- Lancet. Volume 7:Number 12(2022)
- Journal:
- Lancet
- Issue:
- Volume 7:Number 12(2022)
- Issue Display:
- Volume 7, Issue 12 (2022)
- Year:
- 2022
- Volume:
- 7
- Issue:
- 12
- Issue Sort Value:
- 2022-0007-0012-0000
- Page Start:
- e1014
- Page End:
- e1026
- Publication Date:
- 2022-12
- Subjects:
- Public health -- Periodicals
362.1 - Journal URLs:
- http://www.sciencedirect.com/ ↗
- DOI:
- 10.1016/S2468-2667(22)00227-4 ↗
- Languages:
- English
- ISSNs:
- 2468-2667
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- Legaldeposit
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