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Smoking cessation and mortality trends among
118,000 Californians, 1960-1997.
Enstrom JE, Heath
CW
School of Public Health and Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer
Center, University of California, Los Angeles 90095-1772, USA.
We
assessed the impact of smoking cessation on subsequent death rates among
a cohort of 51,343 men and 66,751 women in California enrolled in late
1959 in the original American Cancer Society (ACS) Cancer Prevention
Study (CPS I) and followed for 38 years. We compared the age-adjusted
death rate, expressed as deaths per 1,000 person-years, among all
subjects who smoked cigarettes in 1959 but who had largely quit as of
1997 with the death rate among never smokers over a 38-year period. The
all causes death rate for males decreased from 20.67 during 1960-1969 to
18.68 during 1960-1997 for smokers and decreased from 10.51 to 9.46 for
never smokers. The lung cancer death rate for males increased from 1.558
to 1.728 for smokers and increased from 0.127 to 0.133 for never
smokers. The all causes death rate for females increased from 9.54 to
10.14 for smokers and decreased from 6.95 to 6.44 for never smokers. The
lung cancer death rate for females increased greatly from 0.208 to 0.806
for smokers and increased from 0.094 to 0.116 for never smokers. These
results indicate there has been no important decline in either the
absolute or relative death rates from all causes and lung cancer for
cigarette smokers as a whole compared with never smokers in this large
cohort, in spite of a substantial degree of smoking cessation. While
cessation clearly reduces the mortality risk among long-term former
smokers, the population impact of cessation appears to be less than
currently believed.
PMID: 10468422
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