Stopping Smoking Might Reduce Tumor Recurrence In Non-Muscle Invasive Bladder Cancer
Main Category: Urology / NephrologyAlso Included In: Cancer / Oncology; Smoking / Quit Smoking
Article Date: 07 Aug 2007 - 0:00 PDT
UroToday.com- It is well known that smoking is a risk factor for bladder cancer and is responsible for a fair proportion (50% in men and 25% in women) of the 63,000 new cases of bladder cancer occurring each year in the USA. It has been suggested that the latent effects of former tobacco use coupled with the overall increase in age of the population is responsible for the increased incidence being trended in developed world. It has also been hypothesized that the dwell time of carcinogens in the bladder results in prolonged exposure to carcinogenic amines from cigarette smoking including, amines such as 4-aminobiophenyl and orthotoluidine. As such, patients who have a history of smoking have 4-fold increased risk of bladder cancer with a dose response relationship.
Prior studies have suggested that stopping smoking might allow a risk reduction with respect to bladder cancer incidence. Here, Chen and colleagues have shown that continued smokers have a 2.2-fold greater risk of bladder cancer recurrence compared to those who quite smoking. They evaluated 265 male patients with Ta or T1 disease (no CIS) including 64 non-smokers, 59 quitters (who ceased smoking within a year before and 3 months after diagnosis), 64 ex-smokers, (who ceased smoking more that a year before diagnosis) and 78 continued smokers. After a median follow-up of 38 months and after controlling for tumor stage, grade, multiplicity, and intravesical therapy the 3 year recurrence free survival of continued smokers was 45% compared to 70% for quitters. Notably, quitters had a lower risk of recurrence than did either continued smokers or non-smokers, and had a similar risk to ex-smokers. This suggests that those who might benefit most from stopping smoking are those in whom the tumors developed in the milieu of tobacco carcinogens.
Data such as this must be used in fashioning interventions for patients with bladder cancer since stopping smoking might be one way to enhance the efficacy of existing treatments and useful in reducing the recurrence of bladder cancer. At the very least, such an intervention would reduce morbidity and mortality from cardiovascular disease.
Chen CH, Shun CT, Huang KH, Huang CY, Tsai YC, Yu HJ and Pu YS
BJU. 100(2): 281-6, August 2007.
doi:10.1111/j.1464-410X.2007.06873.x
Reported by UroToday.com Contributing Editor Ashish M. Kamat, MD
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (2)
Why Is It Always Smoking?
posted by Julie Gale on 29 Dec 2009 at 9:47 amI stopped smoking 23 years before bladder cancer was detected (very early stages). Bladder cancer was found a year after I had botox injections. Why then does everyone assume it was the smoking that caused it and not the botox? Has it been thoroughly tested? I think blaming smoking is an easy option. When I asked if I would not have had it if I hadn't smoked, the answer was I would still probably have had it. That would suggest there was another cause?
Why Is It Always Smoking
posted by Jan Chapman on 5 Jan 2011 at 11:00 amI'm a 51 yr old female who never smoked and live a very healthy life but I still got bladder cancer. I know vegetarians who've gotten bladder cancer despite their determination to live as healthy as possible. There are other causes out there still not targeted by FDA, from dyes in cosmetics and hair dye (now banned in Europe but available in the US) to household paint.
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