Br Med J (Clin Res Ed) 1986;293:1217-1222 (8 November), doi:10.1136/bmj.293.6556.1217
Does breathing other people's tobacco smoke cause lung cancer?
N J Wald,
K Nanchahal,
S G Thompson,
H S Cuckle
The available epidemiological studies of lung cancer and exposure
to other people's tobacco smoke, in which exposure was assessed
by whether or not a person classified as a non-smoker lived
with a smoker, were identified and the results combined. There
were 10 case-control studies and three prospective studies.
Overall, there was a highly significant 35% increase in the
risk of lung cancer among non-smokers living with smokers compared
with non-smokers living with non-smokers (relative risk 1.35,
95% confidence interval 1.19 to 1.54). Part of this increase
was almost certainly caused by the misclassification of some
smokers as non-smokers. As smokers, who are more likely to get
lung cancer than non-smokers, tend to live with smokers this
misclassification probably exaggerated the estimated increase
in risk. Adjustment for this error reduced the estimate to 30%
(relative risk 1.30), but as people who live with non-smokers
may still be exposed to other people's smoke this estimate was
revised again to allow for the fact that a truly unexposed reference
group was not used. The increase in risk among non-smokers living
with smokers compared with a completely unexposed group was
thus estimated as 53% (relative risk of 1.53). This analysis,
and the fact that non-smokers breathe environmental tobacco
smoke, which contains carcinogens, into their lungs and that
the generally accepted view is that there is no safe threshold
for the effect of carcinogens, leads to the conclusion that
breathing other people's tobacco smoke is a cause of lung cancer.
About a third of the cases of lung cancer in non-smokers who
live with smokers, and about a quarter of the cases in non-smokers
in general, may be attributed to such exposure.

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