1. A case–control study of tobacco use and other non-occupational risk factors for t(14;18) subtypes of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (United States)
- Author
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Schroeder, J.C., Olshan, A.F., Baric, R., Dent, G.A., Weinberg, C.R., Yount, B., Cerhan, J.R., Lynch, C.F., Schuman, L.M., Tolbert, P.E., Rothman, N., Cantor, K.P., and Blair, A.
- Abstract
Objective: Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) encompasses diverse subtypes, and analyzing NHL as a single outcome may mask associations. In a new approach we evaluated associations with subtypes defined by the t(14;18) translocation, reasoning that cases within these subtypes would have more common risk factors than all NHL Combined. Methods: Archival biopsies from cases in a population-based NHL study were assayed for t(14;18) using polymerase chain reaction amplification. Exposures in 68 t(14;18)-positive and 114-negative cases were compared with 1245 controls. The expectation–maximization algorithm was used to fit polytomous regression models based on all available information, including data from 440 unclassified cases. Results: Family history of hemolymphatic cancer was associated with t(14;18)-negative NHL (odds ratio (OR) 2.4, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.4–3.9), but not t(14;18)-positive NHL. Cigarette smoking was weakly associated with t(14;18)-positive NHL (OR 1.7, CI 0.9–3.3), but ORs decreased as smoking increased. Chewing tobacco was associated with t(14;18)-positive NHL, particularly when used before age 18 (OR 2.5, CI 1.0–6.0, 13 exposed cases). Odds ratios for both case-subtypes were doubled among hair-dye users. Conclusions: Cigarette smoking was not clearly associated with t(14;18)-positive NHL. Family history may be a marker for factors that act specifically through t(14;18)-negative pathogenic mechanisms.
- Published
- 2002
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