• ورود به سامانه
      مشاهده مورد 
      •   صفحهٔ اصلی
      • نشریات انگلیسی
      • Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention
      • Volume 15, Issue 17
      • مشاهده مورد
      •   صفحهٔ اصلی
      • نشریات انگلیسی
      • Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention
      • Volume 15, Issue 17
      • مشاهده مورد
      JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

      Tobacco Smoke Exposure and Breast Cancer Risk in Thai Urban Females

      (ندگان)پدیدآور
      پدیدآور نامشخص
      Thumbnail
      دریافت مدرک مشاهده
      FullText
      اندازه فایل: 
      349.6کیلوبایت
      نوع فايل (MIME): 
      PDF
      نوع مدرک
      Text
      زبان مدرک
      English
      نمایش کامل رکورد
      چکیده
      The incidence of urban female breast cancer has been continuously increasing over the past decade with unknown etiology. One hypothesis for this increase is carcinogen exposure from tobacco. Therefore, the objective of this study was to investigate the risk of urban female breast cancer from tobacco smoke exposure.The matched case control study was conducted among Thai females, aged 17-76 years and living in Bangkok or its surrounding areas. A total of 444 pairs of cases and controls were recruited from the Thai National Cancer Institute. Cases were newly diagnosed and histologically confirmed as breast cancer while controls were selected from healthy women who visited a patient, matched by age ± 5 years. After obtaining informed consent, tobacco smoke exposure data and information on other potential risk factors were collected by interview. The analysis was performed by conditional logistic regression, and presented with odds ratio (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals(CI). From all subjects, 3.8% of cases and 3.4% of controls were active smokers while 11.0% of cases and 6.1% of controls were passive smokers. The highest to lowest sources of passive tobacco smoke were from spouses (40.8%), the workplace (36.8%) and public areas (26.3%), respectively. After adjusting for other potential risk factors or confounders, females with frequent low-dose passive smoke exposure (≤7 hours per week) from a spouse or workplace had adjusted odds ratio 3.77 (95%CI=1.11-12.82) and 4.02 (95%CI=1.04-15.50) higher risk of breast cancer compared with non-smokers, respectively. However, this study did not find any association ofbreast cancer risk in high dose passive tobacco smoke exposure, or a dose response relationship in cumulative passive tobacco smoke exposure per week, or in the active smoker group. In conclusion, passive smoke exposure may be one important risk factor of urban female breast cancer, particularly, from a spouse or workplace. This risk factor highlights the importance of avoiding tobacco smoke exposure as a key measure for breast cancer prevention and control.
      کلید واژگان
      breast cancer
      active smoking
      passive smoking
      urban female
      risk factor

      شماره نشریه
      17
      تاریخ نشر
      2014-12-01
      1393-09-10
      ناشر
      West Asia Organization for Cancer Prevention (WAOCP)

      شاپا
      1513-7368
      2476-762X
      URI
      http://journal.waocp.org/article_29781.html
      https://iranjournals.nlai.ir/handle/123456789/39095

      مرور

      همه جای سامانهپایگاه‌ها و مجموعه‌ها بر اساس تاریخ انتشارپدیدآورانعناوینموضوع‌‌هااین مجموعه بر اساس تاریخ انتشارپدیدآورانعناوینموضوع‌‌ها

      حساب من

      ورود به سامانهثبت نام

      تازه ترین ها

      تازه ترین مدارک
      © کليه حقوق اين سامانه برای سازمان اسناد و کتابخانه ملی ایران محفوظ است
      تماس با ما | ارسال بازخورد
      قدرت یافته توسطسیناوب