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Bo-Qi Liu a Department of Epidemiology, National Cancer
Institute, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Panjiayuan, Chaoyang
District, Beijing 100021, People's Republic of China, b Clinical Trial
Service Unit and Epidemiological Studies Unit, Nuffield Department of
Clinical Medicine, Radcliffe Infirmary, Oxford OX2 6HE, c Division of Nutritional
Sciences, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA, d Institute of Nutrition and Food
Hygiene, Chinese Academy of Preventive Medicine, Beijing 100050, People's Republic of China
Correspondence to: Professor Liu or Professor Peto
gale.mead{at}ctsu.ox.ac.uk
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Abstract |
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Objective:
To assess the hazards at an early phase of the growing epidemic of deaths from tobacco in China.
Design:
Smoking habits before 1980 (obtained from family or other informants) of 0.7 million adults who had died of
neoplastic, respiratory, or vascular causes were compared with those of
a reference group of 0.2 million who had died of other causes.
Setting:
24 urban and 74 rural areas of China.
Subjects:
One million people who had died during
1986-8 and whose families could be interviewed.
Main outcome measures:
Tobacco attributable mortality
in middle or old age from neoplastic, respiratory, or vascular disease.
Results:
Among male smokers aged 35-69 there was a 51% (SE 2) excess of neoplastic deaths, a 31% (2) excess of
respiratory deaths, and a 15% (2) excess of vascular deaths. All three
excesses were significant (P<0.0001). Among male smokers aged
70
there was a 39% (3) excess of neoplastic deaths, a 54% (2) excess of respiratory deaths, and a 6% (2) excess of vascular deaths. Fewer women smoked, but those who did had tobacco attributable risks of lung
cancer and respiratory disease about the same as men. For both sexes,
the lung cancer rates at ages 35-69 were about three times as great in
smokers as in non-smokers, but because the rates among non-smokers in
different parts of China varied widely the absolute excesses of lung
cancer in smokers also varied. Of all deaths attributed to tobacco,
45% were due to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and 15% to lung
cancer; oesophageal cancer, stomach cancer, liver cancer, tuberculosis,
stroke, and ischaemic heart disease each caused 5-8%. Tobacco caused
about 0.6 million Chinese deaths in 1990 (0.5 million men). This will
rise to 0.8 million in 2000 (0.4 million at ages 35-69) or to more if
the tobacco attributed fractions increase.
Conclusions:
At current age specific death rates in
smokers and non-smokers one in four smokers would be killed by tobacco, but as the epidemic grows this proportion will roughly double. If
current smoking uptake rates persist in China (where about two thirds
of men but few women become smokers) tobacco will kill about 100 million of the 0.3 billion males now aged 0-29, with half these deaths
in middle age and half in old age.
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Key messages
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Introduction |
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In developed countries male cigarette smoking increased greatly during the first half of the century, but there was a delay of several decades before the resulting increase in male deaths from tobacco was completed.1-8 In the United States, for example, mean daily cigarette consumption per adult rose over 40 years from one in 1910 to four in 1930 and 10 in 1950 (remaining around 10 until 1980), and the proportion of all US deaths in middle age (35-69) attributable to tobacco rose from 12% in the 1950s to 33% in the 1990s. The increase in deaths occurred several decades after the main increase in cigarette use by young adults because the smokers who are at substantial risk in middle age are those who have smoked since early adult life.
Cigarette smoking among Chinese men followed a similar pattern to that among adults in the United States, although the main increase took place 40 years later. Average daily cigarette consumption per man in China was one in 1952, four in 1972, and 10 in 1992; consumption seemed to have stabilised by 1996 at about 11.9-13 (Over 90% of the 1800 billion cigarettes sold, legally or not, in 1996 were smoked by the 0.4 billion men aged 20 or over.14) Since the rise in smoking by Chinese men is so recent it will be several decades before the full effects are seen. So far a similar rise in smoking has not occurred in Chinese women. In fact the female uptake rate of smoking has fallen, and it is not clear whether mortality attributed to tobacco will increase or decrease in the next few decades.
Serious concerns about smoking and health in China developed around
1980, leading to a large prospective study in Shanghai, retrospective
studies of a few types of cancer in a few parts of China, and a large
nationwide survey of smoking prevalence.12 The known
hazards of tobacco in the United Kingdom and United States (where about
half of all persistent smokers are killed by it8) led in
the mid-1980s to the prediction that tobacco would eventually cause
more than two million deaths a year in China,
5-7 15-18
and since then Chinese cigarette consumption has increased. Although
analogy with findings elsewhere suggests that the hazards in China will
eventually be large, it cannot predict accurately how large or when or
where in China they will be greatest. Even among non-smokers mortality
from diseases that can be caused by tobacco differs widely between the
United Kingdom, United States, and China and, within China, between one
area and another,19-22 and the effects of tobacco smoking
could be greatly modified by such differences. Retrospective studies
are needed throughout China to assess the current effects of tobacco on
the occurrence of specific diseases, and nationwide prospective studies
are needed to monitor the long term evolution of the epidemic. This
report describes a large retrospective study.
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Subjects and methods |
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During 1989-91 we interviewed surviving family members (or sometimes, in rural areas, other informants) of the one million people who died during 1986-8 in 98 areas of China to determine whether the dead person had been a smoker before 1980. Most deaths before age 35 were in children, and few were from diseases that are much affected by active smoking. We therefore restricted the analyses to ages 35-69 and, separately, 70 and over. In other countries most of the excess mortality among smokers is from neoplastic, respiratory, or vascular disease, so the smoking habits of adults who had died of these causes were compared with the habits of those who had died of other causes (the reference group).
The strength of proportional mortality analyses is that any bias affecting assessment of the habits of those in the study group should similarly affect assessment of the habits in the reference group. Hence, differences between the proportions of smokers in the reference group and in people who had died of neoplastic, respiratory, or vascular causes can be used to calculate the risk ratios (smoker versus non-smoker) for mortality from those three groups of causes. For example, the excess of lung cancer deaths among smokers can be inferred from the excess of smokers among those who died of lung cancer. These risk ratios, together with the prevalence of smoking in the reference group, can be used to estimate the percentage of all deaths from each particular cause that would have been avoided if the smokers had had no excess mortality from those diseases. As, however, smoking must have caused a few of the deaths in the reference group (for example, some of those from gastric ulcer) our proportional mortality analyses may have slightly underestimated the overall hazards of tobacco.
Study areas
Figure 1 shows the 98 areas studied. The 24 cities (Beijing,
Tianjin, Shanghai, and 21 others) were chosen non-randomly to include a
wide geographical spread, and the 74 rural counties were chosen by
stratified random sampling20 from the 2000 counties whose
cancer rates in 1973-5 were recorded in the Chinese cancer
atlas.
21 22
Many of the cities are large (although for
some analyses of female mortality six smaller ones are grouped
together), but the counties have smaller populations and were therefore
collected into two groups: 34 in coastal provinces (from Liaoning down
to Guangdong, including the rural areas near Beijing, Tianjin, and
Shanghai) and 40 in inland provinces, which tended to be less
economically developed. For the few counties with particularly large
populations administrative subareas were included randomly until the
total population of the subareas was over 300 000. Although the 24 cities and 74 countries chosen are reasonably representative of urban
and rural (including small town) China, the study includes more urban
than rural deaths, whereas China is 70% rural. Hence, for "all
China" we used a 30:70 mixture of the urban and rural
findings.
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Underlying causes of death
Deaths were identified primarily from local administrative
records, which generally included name, address, sex, age, and
certified cause of death. This information was supplemented by review
of medical records, which were usually available, or by discussions (a
few years after the death) with local health workers, community
leaders, and family, or by both. The findings were recorded as parts I
and II of a standard death certificate.23 Such records
include about 90% of all deaths after age 35, so when calculating
adult death rates we made a 10% reduction in the local population
estimates (which were available, by age and sex, from local
government).
Smoking habits
Information was sought on the smoking habits of each person who
had died. For rural deaths in middle age, four out of five informants
were the surviving spouse or another family member. In urban areas
informants who were not related to the dead person were often unable to
report (or tended to under-report) tobacco use, so the urban analyses
use information only from family members. In rural areas, however, both
family and other local informants knew about (and reported similar
prevalences of) tobacco use by those who had died, and both sources are
used. When the interviewee was the surviving spouse (0.3 million
cases), their smoking habits at the time of the interview and before
1980 were also recorded. The smoking histories included the amount
smoked, age at starting smoking, and age at stopping. This was used to determine whether people had been smokers in 1980, as the terminal illness in 1986-8 is unlikely to have affected smoking behaviour in
1980 (except for diseases preceded by decades of serious symptoms, such
as chronic respiratory problems or rheumatic heart disease). Moreover,
the large nationwide increase in Chinese cigarette consumption during
the 1980s is too recent to have had much effect on deaths in 1986-8 so
it is appropriate to relate such deaths to smoking patterns before
1980.
Validity of information on smoking
There are few former smokers in China (except those who stopped
because they were ill),
12-14 20
and family members were
generally confident about whether the dead person had smoked, although
they were sometimes uncertain of the age when smoking began. Such
uncertainties should, however, affect similarly those who died of
different causes. For 453 deaths in Shanghai for which the surviving
spouse was the informant both husband and wife had reported their
smoking habits in the early 1980s in another study.24 For
these 453 households there was no evidence of bias due to differences
in the source (proxy or self) of the information on tobacco in the
present study.
Validation of reference group
Among people who died from causes other than neoplastic, vascular,
or respiratory disease no single cause predominated. The causes of
their 87 000 deaths at ages 35-69 were infective or parasitic (9%),
diabetes (6%), parkinsonism (0.2%), other nervous or mental disease
(8%), renal disease (8%), hepatic disease (chiefly due to chronic
hepatitis B infection) (19%), peptic ulcer (4%), other digestive
disorders (6%), other medical disorders (6%), road traffic accidents
(7%), suicide or homicide (15%), and other non-medical reasons (12%,
including 2% ill defined). The main analyses assume that this
reference group had had smoking habits similar to those of the general
population. Some check on this is provided by married informants who
described their own smoking habits as well as those of their dead
partner. Smoking rates before 1980 in the 70 000 men and 150 000
women aged 35-69 when their spouse died (standardised to the age and
urban/rural proportions of the reference group) were 61.5% and 12.4%
compared with 62.1% and 12.5% in the reference group itself. This
indicates that the proportional mortality analyses will not exaggerate
the hazards of tobacco.
Statistical methods
Risk ratios and standard errors
Risk ratio calculations
were stratified by five year groups of age at death and by study area,
with each county or city district a separate stratum. (Small cities
have one district, but large ones could have about 10.) For a
particular stratified analysis comparing those who smoked in 1980 with
those who did not, let z denote the ratio of the
Mantel-Haenszel25 "observed minus expected" number of
deaths among smokers to its standard error (s) and let R denote the
maximum likelihood estimate of the risk ratio, calculated by stratified
logistic regression.26 The standard error of R is then
estimated as (R
1)/z. Finally (since R is roughly equal to
e(z/s), the "one step" risk ratio
estimate27), 99% confidence limits for R are estimated by
multiplying or dividing it by e(2.575/s), and when R is
plotted as a black square the height of that square is proportional to
s.27
The age standardised death rate at ages
35-69 is defined as the mean of the seven five yearly rates in this age
range. From it can be calculated the probability that someone aged just
35 will die before age 70.
5 6
(If the standardised rate
per 1000 for all causes is D and that for a particular cause is d, then
this probability is 1
e(
35D/1000), and the cause
specific probability of death at these ages is d/D times this.)
Calculation of a 30:70 mixture of urban and rural results to get
results for all China
Let M denote the age standardised mortality rate, P the proportion of smokers among those who died of the disease
of interest, and R the risk ratio (smoker versus non-smoker), and note
that the proportion of all deaths attributed to tobacco is (P
P/R).
Define w, the urban weight, to be
30×urbanM/(30×urbanM+70×ruralM), and define ChinaP as
w×urbanP+(1
w)×ruralP. Finally, define ChinaR from calculation of
ChinaP/ChinaR =w×urbanP/urbanR+(1
w)×ruralP/ruralR.
Relative and absolute risks
The death rates at ages 35-69 for non-smokers and smokers in a particular population are calculated
from the mortality for the whole of that population, the
smoker:non-smoker risk ratio, and the prevalence of smoking in the
reference group, giving M/(1+(R
1)×prevalence) for non-smokers and
R times this for smokers.
All cause mortality
Absolute risks for
smokers (and for non-smokers) were obtained by adding the four separate
risks from neoplastic, respiratory, vascular, and other causes. The
proportional increase in all cause mortality was obtained by
multiplying the proportional increase in neoplastic, respiratory, or
vascular mortality (that is, relative risk
1) by the fraction of
non-smoker deaths that these three accounted for.
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Results |
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Prevalence of smoking in 1990
Among surviving spouses interviewed in about 1990 the prevalence
of smoking in men was high, and higher in rural than urban areas, but
in women it was low, and lower in rural than urban areas (fig 2). These
prevalences are consistent with those in the 1984 and 1996 nationwide
surveys of smoking prevalence.12-14 At ages 35-69 the
prevalence of smoking remained fairly constant among men, but among
women it was much lower at 35-39 than at 50-69. Over the past few
decades young women, particularly in cities, have become much less
likely to start smoking. The proportion who started to smoke before age
25 was 10% for all urban women born before 1940, but only 1% for
those born in 1950-64. For rural women the prevalences were 4% for
those born before 1940 and 2% for those born in 1950-64. These
unexpected decreases are statistically reliable. For women born before
1920, 1920-9, 1930-9, 1940-9, 1950-9, and 1960-4 the respective
proportions who began smoking before age 25 were 9.8%, 10.1%, 8.8%,
3.3%, 1.3% (91/6866), and 0.6% (6/988) for urban women and 3.9%,
4.3%, 3.9%, 2.9%, 2.2% (93/4291), and 2.5% (17/674) for rural
women.
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Attributable risk
In general the excesses of neoplastic, respiratory, and vascular
deaths among smokers exist because smoking can actually cause those
diseases. Hence, the risk ratio (comparing smokers with non-smokers)
for such diseases and the proportion of smokers among those dying from
these diseases imply the proportion of all such deaths attributed to
tobacco.
Lung cancer
Risk ratios for men
Figure 3 shows the numbers of smokers and non-smokers among men
aged 35-69 who died of lung cancer and those in the reference group
(men who died from causes other than neoplastic, respiratory, or
vascular disease). In the 24 cities 16 317 men died from lung cancer,
82% (13 440) of whom were reported to have smoked before 1980. In the
reference group 30 709 men died, 60% (18 544) of whom were reported
to have smoked. This suggests that lung cancer is about three times as
common among urban smokers as among otherwise similar non-smokers (as
crude division of 82/18 by 60/40 gives a risk ratio of 3), and with
standardisation for age and city district this becomes 2.98 (SE 0.04, 99% confidence interval 2.9 to 3.1). This calculation does not,
however, allow for any biases, the net effect of which would probably
have been to decrease the risk ratio. Hence, the true value of the
urban smoker:non-smoker lung cancer risk ratio may slightly exceed 3.
Risk ratios for women
The age adjusted lung cancer risk ratios for women (right side of
fig 3) are similar to those for men. In the 24 cities 7300 women died
from lung cancer, 42% (3080) of whom smoked; in the reference group
21 171 women died, 15% (3124) of whom smoked. After the bias caused
by the strong correlation of smoking with age among women was allowed
for the risk ratio was 3.24 (0.07, 3.1 to 3.5). Thus, for urban women
(as for urban men) lung cancer was at least three times as common in
smokers as in non-smokers. Among rural women, 21% (325) of the lung
cancer deaths and 9% (1191) of the reference group deaths were in
smokers. After age was adjusted for the risk ratio was 1.98 (0.13, 1.7 to 2.3). This twofold risk ratio for rural women was seen in both
coastal and inland provinces.
Absolute rates in smokers and non-smokers
The age standardised (35-69) death rate from lung cancer for the
whole population of each geographical area is known. This local lung
cancer rate, combined with the local prevalence of smoking (in the
reference group) and the smoker:non-smoker risk ratio can be used to
calculate the local lung cancer rates for smokers and non-smokers.
These are plotted against each other in figure 4. Even among
non-smokers the lung cancer rates differ enormously between cities. For
both sexes, for example, the rate in non-smokers at ages 35-69 in
Xi'an was only 0.1 per 1000 (about the same as in American
non-smokers
5 6
), whereas in Harbin it was nearly 1 per
1000. Thus, although the risk ratio was about the same in both cities,
the absolute excess of lung cancer produced by smoking was much greater
in Harbin than in Xi'an. This was true for both men and women. The
very high lung cancer death rate of 3 per 1000 female smokers in
Harbin, which is based on large enough numbers to be statistically
reliable, is three times the similarly age standardised rate of 1.1 per
1000 female smokers in a large US prospective study during the
1980s,
5 6
and greatly exceeds the US national lung cancer
death rates at these ages (0.6 per 1000 women, 1.4 per 1000 men) in
1990.
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Relative risks for specific diseases among men
Table 1 gives risk ratios for men aged 35-69 in urban China, rural
China, and, by a weighted combination of these, all China. About 70%
of all deaths from cancer in China were from just four diseases: cancer
of the lung, oesophagus, stomach, or liver. Each was significantly more
common among smokers. For lung cancer the all China risk ratio was 2.72 (SE 0.05) for men aged 35-69, indicating that at non-smoker death rates
about half (52.3%) of all deaths from lung cancer in middle aged men would have been avoided. The other risk ratios were 1.61 (SE 0.04) for
oesophageal cancer, 1.35 (0.03) for stomach cancer, 1.40 (0.03) for
liver cancer, and 1.51 (0.05) for an aggregate of five "minor" cancer sites that studies in other countries have associated with smoking (mouth, pharynx, larynx, pancreas, and bladder, each of which
was significantly related to smoking in this study). Finally, the
aggregate of all other neoplastic diseases was also somewhat related to
smoking (risk ratio 1.24 (0.03)). Hence, taking all neoplastic diseases
together, the overall risk ratio was 1.51 (0.02) and the attributable
fraction 24.4% (and 18.7% at older ages). Thus, about a quarter of
all deaths from cancer in middle aged men would have been avoided at
non-smoker death rates.
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Daily number of cigarettes
Table 2 relates the daily cigarette consumption when men last
smoked to the risk ratios for death at ages 35-69. It is restricted to
male smokers whose most recent habits involved only cigarettes (75% of
the urban and 46% of the rural male smokers in table 1) as other
tobacco use is less easily quantified. Most were reported to have
smoked exactly 10, 20, or 30 a day. In both urban and rural areas the
strongest dose-response relations were for lung cancer (risk ratios for
about 10, 20, or 30 cigarettes per day: urban 2.08, 3.59, and 6.92;
rural 2.23, 3.65, and 7.26; both trends P<0.0001). In places where
mortality from lung cancer was substantial even among non-smokers these
sevenfold risk ratios would imply large absolute hazards among
smokers.
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indeed, men in urban China smoking more than 20 cigarettes a day had double the death rate from tuberculosis of
non-smokers. For stomach cancer, liver cancer, stroke, and ischaemic
heart disease the dose relations were weaker (though still
significant). For the aggregate of all other vascular diseases,
however, they were non-significantly reversed, perhaps because
rheumatic heart disease discourages heavy smoking. But taking all
neoplastic, respiratory, and vascular diseases together in men aged
35-69 (subtotal A-C in table 2), the urban risk ratios of 1.28, 1.48, and 1.93 (with negligibly small standard errors) for about 10, 20, and
30 cigarettes per day show a strong trend, as do the corresponding rural risk ratios of 1.26, 1.42, and 1.87.
Age smoking began
Table 3 relates the age when men reportedly began smoking to
mortality at ages 35-69. It includes all male smokers, irrespective of
the type or amount of tobacco, except for the 0.6% for whom the age
smoking began was not reported. The lung cancer risk ratios were
greatest for those reportedly starting before age 20, intermediate for
those starting at ages 20-24, and least for those starting later. The
trends were highly significant both in urban areas (respective risk
ratios 4.11, 2.94, and 2.45; trend P<0.0001) and in rural areas (risk
ratios 3.07, 2.62, 2.26; trend P<0.0001). The trends must, however,
have been weakened by misreporting of the age smoking began because this information relates to habits several decades earlier, perhaps before the informant knew the dead person. Moreover, the great fluctuations in Chinese social circumstances during the decades before
1980, with large changes in cigarette sales, mean that few middle aged
cigarette smokers who died in 1986-8 will have had consistent tobacco
consumption since early adult life. In urban China, however, table 3
shows that for those reportedly starting before age 20 (mean starting
age 17) the excess of lung cancer associated with smoking was almost
twice as great as for those starting later (age 20-24 or
25: mean
starting age 24). The tendency for those who start early to smoke more
accounts for only a small part of this difference.
Absolute risks among men
Figure 5 shows the absolute risks in each area for neoplastic,
respiratory, and vascular mortality and for all causes of death. For
cancer as a whole the death rates among non-smokers varied twofold, but
in most areas the overall cancer death rates among smokers were about
50% greater than those of non-smokers. Deaths from lung cancer account
for about half of this excess cancer mortality among
smokers.
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Results among women
Only 15% of the smokers who died at 35-69 were women. The
results for women in some cities are therefore based on small numbers,
and we combined the results for the six cities with fewer than 50 female smokers in the reference group as "other urban." The risk
ratios were similar for women and men (tables 1 and 4), but because
fewer women smoked only 2.7% of the deaths of women aged 35-69 were
attributed to smoking compared with 13.0% of those of men. The only
substantial difference was that no significant association of stroke
with smoking was seen in rural women, although the association with
ischaemic heart disease remained. Likewise, the general pattern of
absolute risks was similar among women (fig 6) and men (fig 5), except
that in rural China there was no significant association of smoking
with female vascular mortality. In urban areas the absolute hazards of
tobacco were about as great for women as for men, but in rural areas
they were only about half as big, chiefly because in rural areas women
smoked less and started later (table
4).
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Deaths attributed to tobacco
We applied the percentages of various diseases attributed to
smoking in table 1 to independent estimates28 of the
numbers of deaths from these diseases at ages 30-69 and
70 (table
5). This suggests that in 1990 there were about 0.6 million deaths from
tobacco in China. (The difference between the age range 35-69 and 30-69 is unimportant, as the relevant diseases cause few deaths at ages
30-34.) The calculation can be done in several ways, but all give
similar results. For example, it could have been calculated for the
three broad catergories of neoplastic, respiratory, and vascular
disease or, even more crudely, for the 13% of deaths in men and 3% in
women in table 5. Alternatively, the cause specific death rates from
the study could have been used (indicating fewer deaths from heart
disase but more from cancer of the stomach or oesophagus). In each
case, however, 0.6 million of the deaths in 1990 would be attributed to
tobacco (0.5 million in men and 0.1 million in women and 0.3 million at
ages 35-69 and 0.3 million at older ages). These deaths attributed to
tobacco were due to respiratory disease in 0.3 million cases,
neoplastic disease in 0.2 million, and vascular disease in 0.1 million.
The estimate of 0.1 million vascular deaths due to tobacco is less
reliable than that of deaths from neoplastic and respiratory diseases,
but in other populations cigarettes have been shown to cause some
vascular hazard. The main uncertainties lie not in the number of deaths
at ages 35-69 but in the number of deaths at older ages, particularly
from respiratory disease. Our estimate of 0.6 million deaths from
tobacco in 1990 is based more directly on local epidemiological
evidence than the previous WHO estimate of 0.8 million for
1990.18
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Discussion |
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The main findings are broadly compatible with the limited evidence available from Chinese prospective studies.29-33 A nationally representative prospective study of 224 500 men attributes about 12% of deaths at ages 40-79 to tobacco.33 Our results are also compatible with the findings of case-control studies in various parts of China on lung cancer,34-37 oesophageal cancer,38-42 stomach cancer,38 liver cancer,43-45 stroke,46 and myocardial infarction.47-49 Moreover, the main conclusions from the proportional mortality analyses can be confirmed by analyses that use the surviving spouses as the control group: this would multiply the all China risk ratios in table 1 in men and women by 1.04 and 1.08, with risks for all deaths becoming 1.28 and 1.33 and the proportions of deaths attributed to smoking becoming 15% and 4% (instead of 13% and 3%).
Causality
Most of the deaths associated with tobacco were due to neoplastic
or respiratory disease. Mortality from these diseases was positively
related to both the daily dose and, with the possible exception of
liver cancer, the duration of smoking (the risks in middle age being
greatest for those who smoked most and started youngest, tables 2-4).
In 1985, the World Health Organisation's International Agency for
Research on Cancer concluded that smoking was an important cause of
cancers of the lung, oesophagus, mouth, pharynx, larynx, pancreas, and
bladder,50 and a more recent review adds cancers of the
stomach and liver.51 Smoking can cause chronic obstructive
lung disease.
2 8 52
When tuberculosis was an important
cause of death in Britain mortality from it was strongly related to
smoking.8 For these and other reasons
2 4 8
tobacco should be regarded as having actually been a cause of most or
all of the excess mortality from neoplastic and respiratory disease
among smokers.
Two causes of one death
The wide geographical variation across China in death rates among
non-smokers and the size of the absolute excess among smokers shows
that other important causes exist for the main diseases that can be
caused by smoking. The 10-fold variation from one city to another in
death rates from lung cancer in non-smokers (fig 4) may be due to a
combination of both childhood and adult exposure4 to
indoor fumes from domestic fuel34-37 (rather than to
external air pollution or passive smoking); dietary factors may also be
relevant.3 Because the risk ratio comparing smokers and
non-smokers is relatively constant the absolute excess risk associated
with smoking tends to be highest where the cancer rates in non-smokers
are highest. In theory the correlation between lung cancer rates in
smokers and non-smokers might be a statistical artefact produced by
misclassification of many smokers as non-smokers, but the scale of such
errors would have to have been implausibly large, especially among
women, to have produced it.
Causality and increased probability
In China, as elsewhere, the ability of smoking to cause a
particular disease just implies an increased probability of premature
death from it. Thus many smokers do not get lung cancer (so smoking is
not a "sufficient cause" of it), some non-smokers do get lung
cancer (so smoking is not a "necessary cause" of it), but many
smokers who get lung cancer would not have done so if they had not
smoked (so smoking is an important cause of this disease).3 Also, since everybody eventually dies, the
overall probability of death for smokers and for non-smokers is 100%. Smokers, however, are more likely to die before they reach old age
and
on average those killed by smoking at ages 35-69 lose about 20-25 years
of life.5-8
Main diseases attributed to tobacco in China
The main way that smoking kills people in China is by making
diseases that are already fairly common somewhat more so. About 60% of
the deaths attributed to tobacco were due to lung cancer or chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease. Almost all the remainder were due to
just six other diseases, each responsible for 5-8% of these deaths
(oesophageal cancer, stomach cancer, liver cancer, tuberculosis,
stroke, and ischaemic heart disease). The risk ratios for these eight
diseases are generally much lower in China than in the United Kingdom
or United States, but the background rates among non-smokers are (with
the exception of ischaemic heart disease) much greater in China so the
absolute risk produced by tobacco is still substantial among both men
and women who smoke.
Tobacco hazard at current death rates
The all cause risk ratios for urban men who started smoking around
the age of 20 averaged 1.35, and table 1 suggests that at present the
risk ratios do not change between middle and old age. If,
hypothetically, the risk ratio remained constant at 1.35 at all ages
this would mean that one in four smokers (0.35/1.35) who started
smoking at age 20 would eventually be killed by tobacco. The
corresponding proportions are one in five for rural men, one in three
for urban women, and one in four for rural women. Moreover, the risk
ratios for men must have increased slightly since 1987. So at current
(1990s) death rates for non-smokers and for smokers who started around
age 20, about one smoker in four would be killed by tobacco. This is
confirmed by the national prospective study.33
Tobacco hazard at future death rates
In countries such as the United Kingdom and United States recent
studies show that about half of all persistent cigarette smokers are
eventually killed by tobacco (a quarter at ages 35-69, a quarter at
older ages).5-8 Studies at an earlier stage of the
epidemic in these countries had, however, suggested that only about one
smoker in four would be killed by it.7 Likewise, our study
of Chinese death rates in 1987 must substantially underestimate the
future tobacco hazards in middle and old age because few of those
studied had been smoking substantial numbers of cigarettes since early
adult life. The full effects of the large increase in Chinese cigarette
consumption that took place between the 1950s and the 1970s, and the
even larger increase from 500 billion cigarettes in 1980 to 1800 billion in 1996, will not be seen for many years. As the increase was
mainly to due to an increase in each smoker's cigarette consumption
rather than an increase in the proportion of smokers it will
substantially increase the risk per smoker even if cigarettes often
replaced other types of tobacco.1-8 These large changes
in cigarette consumption over the past few decades will at least double
the current hazard of one smoker in four being killed by tobacco. So
about half the young adults in China who are now becoming persistent
cigarette smokers will eventually be killed by the habit.
Future deaths from smoking in China
For public health purposes what can still be substantially
influenced is not the number of deaths from smoking in this decade or
the next but the numbers of deaths over the next several decades if
current smoking patterns persist. Detailed predictions for particular
diseases are not reliable, especially since the background rates among
non-smokers may change unpredictably in ways that also change the
absolute effects of tobacco. (As well as nationwide changes in
diet,
3 20
exercise, and indoor air pollution in future
decades, changes in chronic infective processes could affect the
background rates of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or of other
conditions.) Although the detail of the long term future is uncertain,
the overall pattern is not, and will, on current smoking uptake rates,
be different for women and men.
Women
Our results show that the risks for those who smoke are much the
same for women and men. The prevalence of smoking remains high among
older women in cities such as Beijing, Harbin, Shenyang, and,
particularly, Tianjin (where one third of those aged 35-69 in the
reference group smoked). Although a substantial minority of women born
before 1940 became smokers by age 25, only about 2% of those born
since 1950 have done so. In two large nationwide surveys the prevalence
of smoking among women aged 15-24 was 0.5% both in 1984 and in
1996.12-14 If the current pattern of low uptake rates
persists then eventually deaths from smoking in women will fall,
perhaps to about 1% of all female deaths. However, the danger remains
that, as has happened in many Western countries,5 the
number of young women becoming persistent smokers will
increase
indeed, surveys have reported 10% of young women smoking in
selected small areas in China.53
Men
At present about two thirds of young men in China become daily
smokers before age 25, generally starting around age 20 and then
persisting.12-14 If this pattern continues, and if about
half of all such smokers are killed by the habit, then tobacco will
eventually cause about one third of all deaths in Chinese men, and the
nationwide proportion of deaths due to smoking will rise from 13% in
1987 to about 33%. (In the United States, the proportion of deaths at
ages 35-69 attributed to smoking increased from 12% in the 1950s to
33% in the 1990s.
5 6
) Hence, about 100 million of the
0.3 billion Chinese males now aged 0-29 will be killed by tobacco (half
dying in middle age, half in old age), which would imply about 3 million male deaths a year from tobacco when the young adults of
today reach old age.
Overall projections
The projections of one million deaths a year from tobacco during
the first decade of the next century and three million a year in the
middle of the century are consistent with previous estimates of about
two million Chinese deaths from tobacco in 2025.15-17 If
current smoking patterns persist in China then such projections cannot
be substantially wrong.
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Acknowledgments |
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We thank former minister Chen Min Zhang for his encouragement, the thousands of doctors, nurses, and other field workers who conducted the surveys, and the million interviewees.
Contributors: The survey of medical causes of death in rural counties was proposed by B-QL, J-SC, TCC, J-YL, and RP. Collection of posthumous information on smoking was proposed by RP. B-QL extended the study to urban areas. Y-PW supervised data coding and JB, Z-MC, B-QL, and RP corrected and analysed the data. RP and B-QL are the study guarantors.
Funding: Medical Research Council and Imperial Cancer Research Fund in Britain; US National Institutes of Health grant No 5R01 CA 33638 to TCC, RP, JC and JL; and Chinese Academy of Medical Science and Ministry of Public Health in China.
Competing interest: None declared
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References |
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the global war: proceedings of the seventh world conference on tobacco and health.
Perth: Health Department of Western Australia, 1990:131-132.
a global status report.
Geneva: World Health Organisation, 1997:441-445(Accepted 10 August 1998)
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