Relationship of passive smoking to risk of lung cancer and other smoking-associated diseases.

In the latter part of a large hospital case-control study of the relationship of type of cigarette smoked to risk of various smoking-associated diseases, patients answered questions on the smoking habits of their first spouse and on the extent of passive smoke exposure at home, at work, during trave...

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Main Authors: Lee, P. N., Chamberlain, J., Alderson, M. R.
Format: Online
Language:English
Published: 1986
Online Access:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2001639/
id pubmed-2001639
recordtype oai_dc
spelling pubmed-20016392009-09-10 Relationship of passive smoking to risk of lung cancer and other smoking-associated diseases. Lee, P. N. Chamberlain, J. Alderson, M. R. Research Article In the latter part of a large hospital case-control study of the relationship of type of cigarette smoked to risk of various smoking-associated diseases, patients answered questions on the smoking habits of their first spouse and on the extent of passive smoke exposure at home, at work, during travel and during leisure. In an extension of this study an attempt was made to obtain smoking habit data directly from the spouses of all lifelong non-smoking lung cancer cases and of two lifelong non-smoking matched controls for each case. The attempt was made regardless of whether the patients had answered passive smoking questions in hospital or not. Amongst lifelong non-smokers, passive smoking was not associated with any significant increase in risk of lung cancer, chronic bronchitis, ischaemic heart disease or stroke in any analysis. Limitations of past studies on passive smoking are discussed and the need for further research underlined. From all the available evidence, it appears that any effect of passive smoke on risk of any of the major diseases that have been associated with active smoking is at most small, and may not exist at all. 1986-07 /pmc/articles/PMC2001639/ /pubmed/3730259 Text en
repository_type Open Access Journal
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution US National Center for Biotechnology Information
building NCBI PubMed
collection Online Access
language English
format Online
author Lee, P. N.
Chamberlain, J.
Alderson, M. R.
spellingShingle Lee, P. N.
Chamberlain, J.
Alderson, M. R.
Relationship of passive smoking to risk of lung cancer and other smoking-associated diseases.
author_facet Lee, P. N.
Chamberlain, J.
Alderson, M. R.
author_sort Lee, P. N.
title Relationship of passive smoking to risk of lung cancer and other smoking-associated diseases.
title_short Relationship of passive smoking to risk of lung cancer and other smoking-associated diseases.
title_full Relationship of passive smoking to risk of lung cancer and other smoking-associated diseases.
title_fullStr Relationship of passive smoking to risk of lung cancer and other smoking-associated diseases.
title_full_unstemmed Relationship of passive smoking to risk of lung cancer and other smoking-associated diseases.
title_sort relationship of passive smoking to risk of lung cancer and other smoking-associated diseases.
description In the latter part of a large hospital case-control study of the relationship of type of cigarette smoked to risk of various smoking-associated diseases, patients answered questions on the smoking habits of their first spouse and on the extent of passive smoke exposure at home, at work, during travel and during leisure. In an extension of this study an attempt was made to obtain smoking habit data directly from the spouses of all lifelong non-smoking lung cancer cases and of two lifelong non-smoking matched controls for each case. The attempt was made regardless of whether the patients had answered passive smoking questions in hospital or not. Amongst lifelong non-smokers, passive smoking was not associated with any significant increase in risk of lung cancer, chronic bronchitis, ischaemic heart disease or stroke in any analysis. Limitations of past studies on passive smoking are discussed and the need for further research underlined. From all the available evidence, it appears that any effect of passive smoke on risk of any of the major diseases that have been associated with active smoking is at most small, and may not exist at all.
publishDate 1986
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2001639/
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