Smoking Soon After Waking Could Increase Your Risk Of Lung Cancer

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Main Category: Smoking / Quit Smoking
Also Included In: Lung Cancer;  Public Health
Article Date: 07 Dec 2009 - 2:00 PDT

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New research from the US suggests that smoking soon after waking could increase even a light smoker's risk of lung cancer, because the shorter the time between waking and having a first cigarette, no matter how many you smoke a day, the higher your levels of circulating cotinine, a derivative of nicotine that is made in the body and which has been linked to higher risk of lung cancer.

The researchers said that smoking cessation programs should take into account the time smokers waits before they have their first cigarette of the day because it could make a significant difference to their nicotine uptake.

The study is the work of Dr Joshua E Muscat, professor of public health sciences at Penn State College of Medicine in Hershey, Pennsylvania, and colleagues, and a paper on it appears in the December issue of Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention.

Muscat told the media that:

"Since cotinine levels appear to reflect the risk of lung cancer, our results suggest that smokers who smoke immediately after waking may be especially at risk for lung cancer."

"These people may require a more intensive intervention than other smokers to help them quit smoking on a sustained or permanent basis," he added.

The blood concentration of the metabolite cotinine is a good indicator of how well our bodies absorb nicotine when we smoke cigarettes.

Previous studies have shown there is a wide variation in cotinine levels per cigarette smoked, and the researchers hypothesized that in addition to how often a smoker smokes, there might be other nicotine dependence behaviours that affect cotinine levels, such as time to first cigarette after waking. This in turn could affect a smoker's chances of quitting as well as impacting his or her health.

For the study the researchers recruited 252 healthy black and white community-dwelling daily cigarette smokers and examined a number of behaviours that are thought to reflect the urge to smoke. They also measured their plasma and urinary cotinine levels.

The results showed that: The researchers concluded that:

"These findings suggest that the time to first cigarette is a strong predictor of nicotine uptake and should be considered in the design of smoking interventions."

Muscat said:

"Not all smokers are the same and approaches to smoking reduction may need to account for individual smoking behaviors such as the intensity and frequency of puffing, cravings and physiological symptoms."

"It is unclear why smokers who take their first puff immediately after waking have higher cotinine levels, but this may reflect a more intense pattern of smoking. We need to find out why this is," he added.

Muscat and his team are now trying to find out if time to first cigarette affects levels of other nicotine metabolites. If they find a similar link, then time to first cigarette may become another risk factor for lung cancer.

"Time to First Cigarette after Waking Predicts Cotinine Levels."
Joshua E Muscat, Steven D Stellman, Ralph S Caraballo, and John P Richie, Jr.
Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev, December 2009 18:3415-3420.
DOI:10.1158/1055-9965.EPI-09-0737

Additional source: AACR.

Written by: Catharine Paddock, PhD
Copyright: Medical News Today
Not to be reproduced without permission of Medical News Today

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