Interaction between Tobacco and Alcohol Use and the Risk of Head and Neck Cancer: Pooled Analysis in the International Head and Neck Cancer Epidemiology Consortium

Mia Hashibe, Paul Brennan, Shu‐Chun Chuang, Stefania Boccia(Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore), Xavier Castellsagué(Institut Català d'Oncologia), Chu Chen(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), María Paula Curado(Hospital Araújo Jorge), Luigino Dal Maso(Centro di Riferimento Oncologico), Alexander W. Daudt(Hospital de Clínicas de Porto Alegre), Eleonóra Fabiánová(Public Health Authority of the Slovak Republic), Leticia Fernández(Instituto de Oncología y Radiobiología), Victor Wünsch Filho(Universidade de São Paulo), Silvia Franceschi, Richard B. Hayes(National Cancer Institute), Rolando Herrero, Karl T. Kelsey(Brown University), Sérgio Koifman(Escola Nacional de Saúde Pública), Carlo La Vecchia(University of Milan), Philip Lazarus(Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center), Fabio Levi(Institute of Social and Preventive Medicine), Juan J Lence(Instituto de Oncología y Radiobiología), Dana Mateș, Elena Matos(Universidad de Buenos Aires), Ana Menezes(Universidade Federal de Pelotas), Michael D. McClean(Boston University), Joshua Muscat(Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center), José Eluf‐Neto(Universidade de São Paulo), Andrew F. Olshan, Mark P. Purdue(National Cancer Institute), Péter Rudnai(Orszagos Kornyezetegeszsegugyi Intezet), Stephen M. Schwartz(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Elaine Smith(University of Iowa), Erich M. Sturgis(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Neonilia Szeszenia‐Dabrowska(Nofer Institute of Occupational Medicine), Renato Talamini(Centro di Riferimento Oncologico), Qingyi Wei(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Deborah M. Winn(National Cancer Institute), Oxana Shangina, Agnieszka Pilarska(Medical University of Warsaw), Zuo‐Feng Zhang(University of California, Los Angeles), Gilles Ferro, Julien Berthiller, Paolo Boffetta
Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers & Prevention
February 1, 2009
Cited by 1,238Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: The magnitude of risk conferred by the interaction between tobacco and alcohol use on the risk of head and neck cancers is not clear because studies have used various methods to quantify the excess head and neck cancer burden. METHODS: We analyzed individual-level pooled data from 17 European and American case-control studies (11,221 cases and 16,168 controls) participating in the International Head and Neck Cancer Epidemiology consortium. We estimated the multiplicative interaction parameter (psi) and population attributable risks (PAR). RESULTS: A greater than multiplicative joint effect between ever tobacco and alcohol use was observed for head and neck cancer risk (psi = 2.15; 95% confidence interval, 1.53-3.04). The PAR for tobacco or alcohol was 72% (95% confidence interval, 61-79%) for head and neck cancer, of which 4% was due to alcohol alone, 33% was due to tobacco alone, and 35% was due to tobacco and alcohol combined. The total PAR differed by subsite (64% for oral cavity cancer, 72% for pharyngeal cancer, 89% for laryngeal cancer), by sex (74% for men, 57% for women), by age (33% for cases <45 years, 73% for cases >60 years), and by region (84% in Europe, 51% in North America, 83% in Latin America). CONCLUSIONS: Our results confirm that the joint effect between tobacco and alcohol use is greater than multiplicative on head and neck cancer risk. However, a substantial proportion of head and neck cancers cannot be attributed to tobacco or alcohol use, particularly for oral cavity cancer and for head and neck cancer among women and among young-onset cases.


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