Cargando…

Contrasting male and female trends in tobacco-attributed mortality in China: evidence from successive nationwide prospective cohort studies

BACKGROUND: Chinese men now smoke more than a third of the world's cigarettes, following a large increase in urban then rural usage. Conversely, Chinese women now smoke far less than in previous generations. We assess the oppositely changing effects of tobacco on male and female mortality. METH...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Chen, Zhengming, Peto, Richard, Zhou, Maigeng, Iona, Andri, Smith, Margaret, Yang, Ling, Guo, Yu, Chen, Yiping, Bian, Zheng, Lancaster, Garry, Sherliker, Paul, Pang, Shutao, Wang, Hao, Su, Hua, Wu, Ming, Wu, Xianping, Chen, Junshi, Collins, Rory, Li, Liming
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4691901/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26466050
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(15)00340-2
_version_ 1782407203964059648
author Chen, Zhengming
Peto, Richard
Zhou, Maigeng
Iona, Andri
Smith, Margaret
Yang, Ling
Guo, Yu
Chen, Yiping
Bian, Zheng
Lancaster, Garry
Sherliker, Paul
Pang, Shutao
Wang, Hao
Su, Hua
Wu, Ming
Wu, Xianping
Chen, Junshi
Collins, Rory
Li, Liming
author_facet Chen, Zhengming
Peto, Richard
Zhou, Maigeng
Iona, Andri
Smith, Margaret
Yang, Ling
Guo, Yu
Chen, Yiping
Bian, Zheng
Lancaster, Garry
Sherliker, Paul
Pang, Shutao
Wang, Hao
Su, Hua
Wu, Ming
Wu, Xianping
Chen, Junshi
Collins, Rory
Li, Liming
author_sort Chen, Zhengming
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Chinese men now smoke more than a third of the world's cigarettes, following a large increase in urban then rural usage. Conversely, Chinese women now smoke far less than in previous generations. We assess the oppositely changing effects of tobacco on male and female mortality. METHODS: Two nationwide prospective studies 15 years apart recruited 220 000 men in about 1991 at ages 40–79 years (first study) and 210 000 men and 300 000 women in about 2006 at ages 35–74 years (second study), with follow-up during 1991–99 (mid-year 1995) and 2006–14 (mid-year 2010), respectively. Cox regression yielded sex-specific adjusted mortality rate ratios (RRs) comparing smokers (including any who had stopped because of illness, but not the other ex-smokers, who are described as having stopped by choice) versus never-smokers. FINDINGS: Two-thirds of the men smoked; there was little dependence of male smoking prevalence on age, but many smokers had not smoked cigarettes throughout adult life. Comparing men born before and since 1950, in the older generation, the age at which smoking had started was later and, particularly in rural areas, lifelong exclusive cigarette use was less common than in the younger generation. Comparing male mortality RRs in the first study (mid-year 1995) versus those in the second study (mid-year 2010), the proportional excess risk among smokers (RR-1) approximately doubled over this 15-year period (urban: RR 1·32 [95% CI 1·24–1·41] vs 1·65 [1·53–1·79]; rural: RR 1·13 [1·09–1·17] vs 1·22 [1·16–1·29]), as did the smoking-attributed fraction of deaths at ages 40–79 years (urban: 17% vs 26%; rural: 9% vs 14%). In the second study, urban male smokers who had started before age 20 years (which is now typical among both urban and rural young men) had twice the never-smoker mortality rate (RR 1·98, 1·79–2·19, approaching Western RRs), with substantial excess mortality from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD RR 9·09, 5·11–16·15), lung cancer (RR 3·78, 2·78–5·14), and ischaemic stroke or ischaemic heart disease (combined RR 2·03, 1·66–2·47). Ex-smokers who had stopped by choice (only 3% of ever-smokers in 1991, but 9% in 2006) had little smoking-attributed risk more than 10 years after stopping. Among Chinese women, however, there has been a tenfold intergenerational reduction in smoking uptake rates. In the second study, among women born in the 1930s, 1940s, 1950s, and since 1960 the proportions who had smoked were, respectively, 10%, 5%, 2%, and 1% (3097/30 943, 3265/62 246, 2339/97 344, and 1068/111 933). The smoker versus non-smoker RR of 1·51 (1·40–1·63) for all female mortality at ages 40–79 years accounted for 5%, 3%, 1%, and <1%, respectively, of all the female deaths in these four successive birth cohorts. In 2010, smoking caused about 1 million (840 000 male, 130 000 female) deaths in China. INTERPRETATION: Smoking will cause about 20% of all adult male deaths in China during the 2010s. The tobacco-attributed proportion is increasing in men, but low, and decreasing, in women. Although overall adult mortality rates are falling, as the adult population of China grows and the proportion of male deaths due to smoking increases, the annual number of deaths in China that are caused by tobacco will rise from about 1 million in 2010 to 2 million in 2030 and 3 million in 2050, unless there is widespread cessation. FUNDING: Wellcome Trust, MRC, BHF, CR-UK, Kadoorie Charitable Foundation, Chinese MoST and NSFC
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4691901
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2015
publisher Elsevier
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-46919012016-01-08 Contrasting male and female trends in tobacco-attributed mortality in China: evidence from successive nationwide prospective cohort studies Chen, Zhengming Peto, Richard Zhou, Maigeng Iona, Andri Smith, Margaret Yang, Ling Guo, Yu Chen, Yiping Bian, Zheng Lancaster, Garry Sherliker, Paul Pang, Shutao Wang, Hao Su, Hua Wu, Ming Wu, Xianping Chen, Junshi Collins, Rory Li, Liming Lancet Articles BACKGROUND: Chinese men now smoke more than a third of the world's cigarettes, following a large increase in urban then rural usage. Conversely, Chinese women now smoke far less than in previous generations. We assess the oppositely changing effects of tobacco on male and female mortality. METHODS: Two nationwide prospective studies 15 years apart recruited 220 000 men in about 1991 at ages 40–79 years (first study) and 210 000 men and 300 000 women in about 2006 at ages 35–74 years (second study), with follow-up during 1991–99 (mid-year 1995) and 2006–14 (mid-year 2010), respectively. Cox regression yielded sex-specific adjusted mortality rate ratios (RRs) comparing smokers (including any who had stopped because of illness, but not the other ex-smokers, who are described as having stopped by choice) versus never-smokers. FINDINGS: Two-thirds of the men smoked; there was little dependence of male smoking prevalence on age, but many smokers had not smoked cigarettes throughout adult life. Comparing men born before and since 1950, in the older generation, the age at which smoking had started was later and, particularly in rural areas, lifelong exclusive cigarette use was less common than in the younger generation. Comparing male mortality RRs in the first study (mid-year 1995) versus those in the second study (mid-year 2010), the proportional excess risk among smokers (RR-1) approximately doubled over this 15-year period (urban: RR 1·32 [95% CI 1·24–1·41] vs 1·65 [1·53–1·79]; rural: RR 1·13 [1·09–1·17] vs 1·22 [1·16–1·29]), as did the smoking-attributed fraction of deaths at ages 40–79 years (urban: 17% vs 26%; rural: 9% vs 14%). In the second study, urban male smokers who had started before age 20 years (which is now typical among both urban and rural young men) had twice the never-smoker mortality rate (RR 1·98, 1·79–2·19, approaching Western RRs), with substantial excess mortality from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD RR 9·09, 5·11–16·15), lung cancer (RR 3·78, 2·78–5·14), and ischaemic stroke or ischaemic heart disease (combined RR 2·03, 1·66–2·47). Ex-smokers who had stopped by choice (only 3% of ever-smokers in 1991, but 9% in 2006) had little smoking-attributed risk more than 10 years after stopping. Among Chinese women, however, there has been a tenfold intergenerational reduction in smoking uptake rates. In the second study, among women born in the 1930s, 1940s, 1950s, and since 1960 the proportions who had smoked were, respectively, 10%, 5%, 2%, and 1% (3097/30 943, 3265/62 246, 2339/97 344, and 1068/111 933). The smoker versus non-smoker RR of 1·51 (1·40–1·63) for all female mortality at ages 40–79 years accounted for 5%, 3%, 1%, and <1%, respectively, of all the female deaths in these four successive birth cohorts. In 2010, smoking caused about 1 million (840 000 male, 130 000 female) deaths in China. INTERPRETATION: Smoking will cause about 20% of all adult male deaths in China during the 2010s. The tobacco-attributed proportion is increasing in men, but low, and decreasing, in women. Although overall adult mortality rates are falling, as the adult population of China grows and the proportion of male deaths due to smoking increases, the annual number of deaths in China that are caused by tobacco will rise from about 1 million in 2010 to 2 million in 2030 and 3 million in 2050, unless there is widespread cessation. FUNDING: Wellcome Trust, MRC, BHF, CR-UK, Kadoorie Charitable Foundation, Chinese MoST and NSFC Elsevier 2015-10-10 /pmc/articles/PMC4691901/ /pubmed/26466050 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(15)00340-2 Text en © 2015 Chen et al. Open Access article distributed under the terms of CC BY http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).
spellingShingle Articles
Chen, Zhengming
Peto, Richard
Zhou, Maigeng
Iona, Andri
Smith, Margaret
Yang, Ling
Guo, Yu
Chen, Yiping
Bian, Zheng
Lancaster, Garry
Sherliker, Paul
Pang, Shutao
Wang, Hao
Su, Hua
Wu, Ming
Wu, Xianping
Chen, Junshi
Collins, Rory
Li, Liming
Contrasting male and female trends in tobacco-attributed mortality in China: evidence from successive nationwide prospective cohort studies
title Contrasting male and female trends in tobacco-attributed mortality in China: evidence from successive nationwide prospective cohort studies
title_full Contrasting male and female trends in tobacco-attributed mortality in China: evidence from successive nationwide prospective cohort studies
title_fullStr Contrasting male and female trends in tobacco-attributed mortality in China: evidence from successive nationwide prospective cohort studies
title_full_unstemmed Contrasting male and female trends in tobacco-attributed mortality in China: evidence from successive nationwide prospective cohort studies
title_short Contrasting male and female trends in tobacco-attributed mortality in China: evidence from successive nationwide prospective cohort studies
title_sort contrasting male and female trends in tobacco-attributed mortality in china: evidence from successive nationwide prospective cohort studies
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4691901/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26466050
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(15)00340-2
work_keys_str_mv AT chenzhengming contrastingmaleandfemaletrendsintobaccoattributedmortalityinchinaevidencefromsuccessivenationwideprospectivecohortstudies
AT petorichard contrastingmaleandfemaletrendsintobaccoattributedmortalityinchinaevidencefromsuccessivenationwideprospectivecohortstudies
AT zhoumaigeng contrastingmaleandfemaletrendsintobaccoattributedmortalityinchinaevidencefromsuccessivenationwideprospectivecohortstudies
AT ionaandri contrastingmaleandfemaletrendsintobaccoattributedmortalityinchinaevidencefromsuccessivenationwideprospectivecohortstudies
AT smithmargaret contrastingmaleandfemaletrendsintobaccoattributedmortalityinchinaevidencefromsuccessivenationwideprospectivecohortstudies
AT yangling contrastingmaleandfemaletrendsintobaccoattributedmortalityinchinaevidencefromsuccessivenationwideprospectivecohortstudies
AT guoyu contrastingmaleandfemaletrendsintobaccoattributedmortalityinchinaevidencefromsuccessivenationwideprospectivecohortstudies
AT chenyiping contrastingmaleandfemaletrendsintobaccoattributedmortalityinchinaevidencefromsuccessivenationwideprospectivecohortstudies
AT bianzheng contrastingmaleandfemaletrendsintobaccoattributedmortalityinchinaevidencefromsuccessivenationwideprospectivecohortstudies
AT lancastergarry contrastingmaleandfemaletrendsintobaccoattributedmortalityinchinaevidencefromsuccessivenationwideprospectivecohortstudies
AT sherlikerpaul contrastingmaleandfemaletrendsintobaccoattributedmortalityinchinaevidencefromsuccessivenationwideprospectivecohortstudies
AT pangshutao contrastingmaleandfemaletrendsintobaccoattributedmortalityinchinaevidencefromsuccessivenationwideprospectivecohortstudies
AT wanghao contrastingmaleandfemaletrendsintobaccoattributedmortalityinchinaevidencefromsuccessivenationwideprospectivecohortstudies
AT suhua contrastingmaleandfemaletrendsintobaccoattributedmortalityinchinaevidencefromsuccessivenationwideprospectivecohortstudies
AT wuming contrastingmaleandfemaletrendsintobaccoattributedmortalityinchinaevidencefromsuccessivenationwideprospectivecohortstudies
AT wuxianping contrastingmaleandfemaletrendsintobaccoattributedmortalityinchinaevidencefromsuccessivenationwideprospectivecohortstudies
AT chenjunshi contrastingmaleandfemaletrendsintobaccoattributedmortalityinchinaevidencefromsuccessivenationwideprospectivecohortstudies
AT collinsrory contrastingmaleandfemaletrendsintobaccoattributedmortalityinchinaevidencefromsuccessivenationwideprospectivecohortstudies
AT liliming contrastingmaleandfemaletrendsintobaccoattributedmortalityinchinaevidencefromsuccessivenationwideprospectivecohortstudies