Association between duration of smoking abstinence before non-small-cell lung cancer diagnosis and survival: a retrospective, pooled analysis of cohort studies

Aline Fusco Fares(University Health Network), Yao Li(University of Toronto), Mei Jiang(University Health Network), M. Catherine Brown(University Health Network), Andrew C. L. Lam(University Health Network), Reenika Aggarwal(University Health Network), Sabine Schmid(University Health Network), Natasha B. Leighl(University Health Network), Frances A. Shepherd(University Health Network), Zhichao Wang(Nanjing University of Chinese Medicine), Nancy Diao(Harvard University), Angela S. Wenzlaff(Wayne State University), Juntao Xie(Fudan University Shanghai Cancer Center), Takashi Kohno, Neil E. Caporaso(National Institutes of Health), Curtis C. Harris(National Institutes of Health), Hongxia Ma(Nanjing Medical University), Matthew J Barnett(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Letícia Ferro Leal(Hospital de Câncer de Barretos), Guillermo Fernández‐Tardón(Universidad de Oviedo), Mónica Pérez‐Ríos(Universidade de Santiago de Compostela), Michael P.A. Davies(University of Liverpool), Fiona Taylor(Weston Park Cancer Centre), Ben Schöttker(German Cancer Research Center), Paul Brennan(Centre international de recherche sur le cancer), Давид Заридзе(National Medical Research Center of Cardiology), Ivana Holcátová(Charles University), Jolanta Lissowska(The Maria Sklodowska-Curie National Research Institute of Oncology), Beata Świątkowska(Nofer Institute of Occupational Medicine), Dana Mateș, Milan Savić(Centar za Promociju Nauke), Hermann Brenner(German Cancer Research Center), Angeline S. Andrew(Dartmouth–Hitchcock Medical Center), Angela Cox(University of Sheffield), John K. Field(University of Liverpool), Alberto Ruano‐Raviña(Universidade de Santiago de Compostela), Sanjay Shete(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Adonina Tardón(Universidad de Oviedo), Ying Wang(American Cancer Society), Loı̈c Le Marchand(University of Hawaii System), Rui Manuel Reis(Hospital de Câncer de Barretos), Matthew B. Schabath(Moffitt Cancer Center), Chu Chen(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Hongbing Shen(Nanjing Medical University), Bríd M. Ryan(National Institutes of Health), Maria Teresa Landi(National Institutes of Health), Kouya Shiraishi(National Cancer Research Institute), Jie Zhang(Fudan University Shanghai Cancer Center), Ann G. Schwartz(Wayne State University), Ming‐Sound Tsao(University Health Network), David C. Christiani(Harvard University), Ping Yang(Mayo Clinic in Florida), Rayjean J Hung(University of Toronto), Wei Xu(University Health Network), Geoffrey Liu(University Health Network)
The Lancet Public Health
August 24, 2023
Cited by 29Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: The association between duration of smoking abstinence before non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) diagnosis and subsequent survival can influence public health messaging delivered in lung-cancer screening. We aimed to assess whether the duration of smoking abstinence before diagnosis of NSCLC is associated with improved survival. METHODS: In this retrospective, pooled analysis of cohort studies, we used 26 cohorts participating in Clinical Outcomes Studies of the International Lung Cancer Consortium (COS-ILCCO) at 23 hospitals. 16 (62%) were from North America, six (23%) were from Europe, three (12%) were from Asia, and one (4%) was from South America. Patients enrolled were diagnosed between June 1, 1983, and Dec 31, 2019. Eligible patients had smoking data before NSCLC diagnosis, epidemiological data at diagnosis (obtained largely from patient questionnaires), and clinical information (retrieved from medical records). Kaplan-Meier curves and multivariable Cox models (ie, adjusted hazard ratios [aHRs]) were generated with individual, harmonised patient data from the consortium database. We estimated overall survival for all causes, measured in years from diagnosis date until the date of the last follow-up or death due to any cause and NSCLC-specific survival. FINDINGS: Of 42 087 patients with NSCLC in the COS-ILCCO database, 21 893 (52·0%) of whom were male and 20 194 (48·0%) of whom were female, we excluded 4474 (10·6%) with missing data. Compared with current smokers (15 036 [40·0%] of 37 613), patients with 1-3 years of smoking abstinence before NSCLC diagnosis (2890 [7·7%]) had an overall survival aHR of 0·92 (95% CI 0·87-0·97), patients with 3-5 years of smoking abstinence (1114 [3·0%]) had an overall survival aHR of 0·90 (0·83-0·97), and patients with more than 5 years of smoking abstinence (10 841 [28·8%]) had an overall survival aHR of 0·90 (0·87-0·93). Improved NSCLC-specific survival was observed in 4301 (44%) of 9727 patients who had quit cigarette smoking and was significant at abstinence durations of more than 5 years (aHR 0·87, 95% CI 0·81-0·93). Results were consistent across age, sex, histology, and disease-stage distributions. INTERPRETATION: In this large, pooled analysis of cohort studies across Asia, Europe, North America, and South America, overall survival was improved in patients with NSCLC whose duration of smoking abstinence before diagnosis was as short as 1 year. These findings suggest that quitting smoking can improve overall survival, even if NSCLC is diagnosed at a later lung-cancer screening visit. These findings also support the implementation of public health smoking cessation strategies at any time. FUNDING: The Alan B Brown Chair, The Posluns Family Fund, The Lusi Wong Fund, and the Princess Margaret Cancer Foundation.


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