与吸烟有关的癌症监测——美国,2010-2014年。

IF 37.3 1区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Mmwr Surveillance Summaries Pub Date : 2018-11-02 DOI:10.15585/mmwr.ss6712a1
M Shayne Gallaway, S Jane Henley, C Brooke Steele, Behnoosh Momin, Cheryll C Thomas, Ahmed Jamal, Katrina F Trivers, Simple D Singh, Sherri L Stewart
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引用次数: 0

摘要

问题/状况:吸烟是癌症的主要可预防原因,导致至少12种癌症,包括急性髓细胞白血病(AML)和口腔癌和咽部癌;食管胃结肠和直肠;肝脏胰喉肺、支气管和气管;肾脏和肾盂;膀胱;和子宫颈。本报告根据性别、年龄、种族/民族、大都市县分类、肿瘤特征、美国人口普查地区和州,对每种癌症类型的近期烟草相关癌症发病率进行了全面评估。这些数据对于烟草预防和控制措施的启动、监测和评估非常重要。涵盖的时间段:2010-2014系统描述:美国疾病控制与预防中心癌症登记处国家计划和国家癌症研究所监测、流行病学和最终结果计划的癌症发病率数据用于计算2010-2014年经年龄调整的平均年发病率和2010-2014年经过年龄调整的年发病率趋势。这些癌症发病率数据覆盖了约99%的美国人口:该报告提供了已知与吸烟有因果关系的12种癌症类型中每种类型的年龄调整后的癌症发病率,包括2014年美国卫生部长认为与吸烟有亲缘关系的肝脏和结直肠癌癌症。研究结果按人口统计学和地理特征、肿瘤特征的百分比分布以及按性别划分的癌症发病率趋势进行报告。结果:2010-2014年期间,美国报告了约330万例新的烟草相关癌症病例,每年约667000例。年龄调整后的发病率从每100000人4.2例AML病例到每100000人61.3例癌症病例不等。按癌症类型划分,男性的发病率高于女性(不包括癌症),非西班牙裔的发病率低于西班牙族(除胃癌、肝癌、肾癌和宫颈癌外的所有癌症),非大都市县的人发病率高于大都市县(除胃癌,肝癌,胰腺癌和AML外的所有肿瘤),西部低于美国其他人口普查地区(除胃、肝、膀胱和AML外)。与其他种族/民族相比,某些癌症发病率在白人(口腔和咽部、食道、膀胱和AML)、黑人(结肠和直肠、胰腺、喉部、肺和支气管、宫颈和肾脏)以及亚洲人/太平洋岛民(胃和肝)中最高。2010-2014年期间,所有烟草相关癌症的发病率每年下降1.2%,主要受喉癌(3.0%)、肺癌(2.2%)、结直肠癌(2.1%)和膀胱癌(1.3%)下降的影响,白人、黑人、非西班牙裔和非大都市县的人。这些与烟草相关的癌症发病率过高,反映了美国癌症发病率的总体人口统计模式,也反映了烟草使用模式。公共卫生行动:可以通过预防和控制烟草使用以及全面的癌症控制工作来减少与烟草相关的癌症发病率,这些工作的重点是降低癌症风险,及早发现癌症,并更好地帮助受癌症影响特别严重的社区。监测癌症发病率的持续监测可以确定烟草相关癌症发病率高的人群,并评估烟草控制计划和政策的有效性。可以开展实施研究,以更广泛地采用现有的循证癌症预防和筛查方案以及烟草控制措施,特别是针对癌症发病率差异最大的群体。
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Surveillance for Cancers Associated with Tobacco Use - United States, 2010-2014.

Problem/condition: Tobacco use is the leading preventable cause of cancer, contributing to at least 12 types of cancer, including acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and cancers of the oral cavity and pharynx; esophagus; stomach; colon and rectum; liver; pancreas; larynx; lung, bronchus, and trachea; kidney and renal pelvis; urinary bladder; and cervix. This report provides a comprehensive assessment of recent tobacco-associated cancer incidence for each cancer type by sex, age, race/ethnicity, metropolitan county classification, tumor characteristics, U.S. census region, and state. These data are important for initiation, monitoring, and evaluation of tobacco prevention and control measures.

Period covered: 2010-2014.

Description of system: Cancer incidence data from CDC's National Program of Cancer Registries and the National Cancer Institute's Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results program were used to calculate average annual age-adjusted incidence rates for 2010-2014 and trends in annual age-adjusted incidence rates for 2010-2014. These cancer incidence data cover approximately 99% of the U.S.

Population: This report provides age-adjusted cancer incidence rates for each of the 12 cancer types known to be causally associated with tobacco use, including liver and colorectal cancer, which were deemed to be causally associated with tobacco use by the U.S. Surgeon General in 2014. Findings are reported by demographic and geographic characteristics, percentage distributions for tumor characteristics, and trends in cancer incidence by sex.

Results: During 2010-2014, approximately 3.3 million new tobacco-associated cancer cases were reported in the United States, approximately 667,000 per year. Age-adjusted incidence rates ranged from 4.2 AML cases per 100,000 persons to 61.3 lung cancer cases per 100,000 persons. By cancer type, incidence rates were higher among men than women (excluding cervical cancer), higher among non-Hispanics than Hispanics (for all cancers except stomach, liver, kidney, and cervical), higher among persons in nonmetropolitan counties than those in metropolitan counties (for all cancers except stomach, liver, pancreatic, and AML), and lower in the West than in other U.S. census regions (all except stomach, liver, bladder, and AML). Compared with other racial/ethnic groups, certain cancer rates were highest among whites (oral cavity and pharyngeal, esophageal, bladder, and AML), blacks (colon and rectal, pancreatic, laryngeal, lung and bronchial, cervical, and kidney), and Asians/Pacific Islanders (stomach and liver). During 2010-2014, the rate of all tobacco-associated cancers combined decreased 1.2% per year, influenced largely by decreases in cancers of the larynx (3.0%), lung (2.2%), colon and rectum (2.1%), and bladder (1.3%).

Interpretation: Although tobacco-associated cancer incidence decreased overall during 2010-2014, the incidence remains high in several states and subgroups, including among men, whites, blacks, non-Hispanics, and persons in nonmetropolitan counties. These disproportionately high rates of tobacco-related cancer incidence reflect overall demographic patterns of cancer incidence in the United States and also reflect patterns of tobacco use.

Public health action: Tobacco-associated cancer incidence can be reduced through prevention and control of tobacco use and comprehensive cancer-control efforts focused on reducing cancer risk, detecting cancer early, and better assisting communities disproportionately affected by cancer. Ongoing surveillance to monitor cancer incidence can identify populations with a high incidence of tobacco-associated cancers and evaluate the effectiveness of tobacco control programs and policies. Implementation research can be conducted to achieve wider adoption of existing evidence-based cancer prevention and screening programs and tobacco control measures, especially to reach groups with the largest disparities in cancer rates.

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来源期刊
Mmwr Surveillance Summaries
Mmwr Surveillance Summaries PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
60.50
自引率
1.20%
发文量
9
期刊介绍: The Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) Series, produced by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), is commonly referred to as "the voice of CDC." Serving as the primary outlet for timely, reliable, authoritative, accurate, objective, and practical public health information and recommendations, the MMWR is a crucial publication. Its readership primarily includes physicians, nurses, public health practitioners, epidemiologists, scientists, researchers, educators, and laboratorians.
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