著者
Thi Tra Bui Minji Han Ngoc Minh Luu Thi Phuong Thao Tran Min Kyung Lim Jin-Kyoung Oh
出版者
Japan Epidemiological Association
雑誌
Journal of Epidemiology (ISSN:09175040)
巻号頁・発行日
pp.JE20220175, (Released:2022-11-26)
参考文献数
41
被引用文献数
2

BackgroundAlcohol drinking behaviors change temporally and can lead to changes in related cancer risks; previous studies have been unable to identify the association between the two using a single-measurement approach. Thus, this study aimed to investigate the association of drinking trajectories with the cancer risk in Korean men.MethodsA trajectory analysis using group-based trajectory modeling was performed on 2,839,332 men using data on alcohol drinking levels collected thrice during the Korean National Health Insurance Service’s general health screening program conducted between 2002 and 2007. Cox proportional hazards regression was performed to evaluate the associations between drinking trajectories and cancer incidence, after adjustments for age, income, body mass index, smoking status, physical activity, family history of cancer, and comorbidities.ResultsDuring 10.5 years of follow-up, 189,617 cancer cases were recorded. Six trajectories were determined: non-drinking, light, moderate, decreasing-heavy, increasing-heavy, and steady-heavy. Light-to-heavy alcohol consumption increased the risk for all cancers combined in a dose-dependent manner (adjusted hazards ratio, 95% confidence interval for trajectories = 1.03, 1.02-1.05; 1.06, 1.05-1.08; 1.19, 1.16-1.22; 1.23, 1.20-1.26; and 1.33, 1.29-1.38; respectively [p-trend <0.001]). Light-to-heavy alcohol consumption was linked to lip, oral cavity, pharyngeal, esophageal, colorectal, laryngeal, stomach, and gallbladder and biliary tract cancer risks, while heavy alcohol consumption was associated with hepatic, pancreatic, and lung cancer risks. An inverse association was observed for thyroid cancer. The cancer risks were lower for decreasing-heavy drinkers, compared to steady-heavy drinkers.ConclusionNo safe drinking limits were identified for cancer risks; reduction in heavy intake had protective effects.

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#J_Epidemi Thank You Authors! 2023: Cancer Risk According to Alcohol Consumption Trajectories: A Population-based Cohort Study of 2.8 Million Korean Men Thi Tra Bui, et al. https://t.co/YUy64oevRU
#J_Epidemi 2023 December Issue: Cancer Risk According to Alcohol Consumption Trajectories: A Population-based Cohort Study of 2.8 Million Korean Men Thi Tra Bui et al. https://t.co/YUy64oevRU Erratum: https://t.co/D4Sh1mPSHv @J_Epidemi https://t.co/Et3nmx6V3Y
J-STAGE Articles - Cancer Risk According to Alcohol Consumption Trajectories: A Population-based Cohort Study of 2.8 Million Korean Men https://t.co/ixxoccqrM9
New Korean study: "Light-to-heavy alcohol consumption increased the risk for all cancers combined in a dose-dependent manner. No safe drinking limits were identified for cancer risks; reduction in heavy intake had protective effects." https://t.co/W1IFxIX60R
Gran estudio observacional: Más consumo de alcohol asociado a más riesgo de cáncer, incluso en cantidades pequeñas: https://t.co/fVE4OrBUxW
Well, I’m not a male korean, guess I’m ok-ish? https://t.co/t0Da3D2Kj2
Advanced Publication: Cancer risk according to alcohol consumption trajectories: A population-based cohort study on 2.8 million Korean men Thi Tra Bui, Minji Han, Ngoc Minh Luu, Thi Phuong Thao Tran, Min Kyung Lim, Jin-Kyoung Oh https://t.co/jsgBk16AoB https://t.co/tN8m4seMWJ

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