Alcohol drinking and head and neck cancer risk: the joint effect of intensity and duration. Other Scholarly Work

Di Credico, Gioia, Polesel, Jerry, Dal Maso, Luigino et al. (2020). Alcohol drinking and head and neck cancer risk: the joint effect of intensity and duration. . BRITISH JOURNAL OF CANCER, 123(9), 1456-1463. 10.1038/s41416-020-01031-z

cited authors

  • Di Credico, Gioia; Polesel, Jerry; Dal Maso, Luigino; Pauli, Francesco; Torelli, Nicola; Luce, Daniele; Radoï, Loredana; Matsuo, Keitaro; Serraino, Diego; Brennan, Paul; Holcatova, Ivana; Ahrens, Wolfgang; Lagiou, Pagona; Canova, Cristina; Richiardi, Lorenzo; Healy, Claire M; Kjaerheim, Kristina; Conway, David I; Macfarlane, Gary J; Thomson, Peter; Agudo, Antonio; Znaor, Ariana; Franceschi, Silvia; Herrero, Rolando; Toporcov, Tatiana N; Moyses, Raquel A; Muscat, Joshua; Negri, Eva; Vilensky, Marta; Fernandez, Leticia; Curado, Maria Paula; Menezes, Ana; Daudt, Alexander W; Koifman, Rosalina; Wunsch-Filho, Victor; Olshan, Andrew F; Zevallos, Jose P; Sturgis, Erich M; Li, Guojun; Levi, Fabio; Zhang, Zuo-Feng; Morgenstern, Hal; Smith, Elaine; Lazarus, Philip; La Vecchia, Carlo; Garavello, Werner; Chen, Chu; Schwartz, Stephen M; Zheng, Tongzhang; Vaughan, Thomas L; Kelsey, Karl; McClean, Michael; Benhamou, Simone; Hayes, Richard B; Purdue, Mark P; Gillison, Maura; Schantz, Stimson; Yu, Guo-Pei; Chuang, Shu-Chun; Boffetta, Paolo; Hashibe, Mia; Yuan-Chin, Amy Lee; Edefonti, Valeria

authors

abstract

  • Background

    Alcohol is a well-established risk factor for head and neck cancer (HNC). This study aims to explore the effect of alcohol intensity and duration, as joint continuous exposures, on HNC risk.

    Methods

    Data from 26 case-control studies in the INHANCE Consortium were used, including never and current drinkers who drunk ≤10 drinks/day for ≤54 years (24234 controls, 4085 oral cavity, 3359 oropharyngeal, 983 hypopharyngeal and 3340 laryngeal cancers). The dose-response relationship between the risk and the joint exposure to drinking intensity and duration was investigated through bivariate regression spline models, adjusting for potential confounders, including tobacco smoking.

    Results

    For all subsites, cancer risk steeply increased with increasing drinks/day, with no appreciable threshold effect at lower intensities. For each intensity level, the risk of oral cavity, hypopharyngeal and laryngeal cancers did not vary according to years of drinking, suggesting no effect of duration. For oropharyngeal cancer, the risk increased with durations up to 28 years, flattening thereafter. The risk peaked at the higher levels of intensity and duration for all subsites (odds ratio = 7.95 for oral cavity, 12.86 for oropharynx, 24.96 for hypopharynx and 6.60 for larynx).

    Conclusions

    Present results further encourage the reduction of alcohol intensity to mitigate HNC risk.

publication date

  • October 1, 2020

published in

keywords

  • Adolescent
  • Adult
  • Aged
  • Aged, 80 and over
  • Alcohol Drinking
  • Case-Control Studies
  • Female
  • Head and Neck Neoplasms
  • Humans
  • Laryngeal Neoplasms
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Mouth Neoplasms
  • Oropharyngeal Neoplasms
  • Risk Factors
  • Severity of Illness Index
  • Smoking
  • Time Factors
  • Young Adult

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

Medium

  • Print-Electronic

start page

  • 1456

end page

  • 1463

volume

  • 123

issue

  • 9