肺癌は 子宮乳癌を 追い抜いた   川柳(7)へ戻る

More Female Smokers Dying of Lung Cancer
More Female Smokers Dying of Lung Cancer

医学研究者が男性におけるタバコ関連疾患と喫煙率は減少しているにもかかわらず、女性では喫煙による死亡が増加し続けている。女性における肺がんの流行は数十年間、確実に拡大し続けている。イリノイ州Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicagoの研究者Dr. Jyoti Patel(血液学・腫瘍学講師)によると、1930年から1997年の間に喫煙関連死亡が600%増加した。「人々は肺がんが女性の病気であることを認識する必要がある」。「ほとんどの女性に尋ねてみても、彼女達は肺がんに罹りやすいことを認識していない」。この研究では、肺がんによる死亡が、乳がんと生殖器の癌による死亡をあわせた数を上回っていることも明らかになった。これは30年前に想像されたいた数字をはるかに上回っている。さらにその数字は予想を上回る速度で増加を続けている」。

解説

Lung Cancer in US Women  A Contemporary Epidemic 

Jyoti D. Patel, MD; Peter B. Bach, MD; Mark G. Kris, MD 

JAMA. 2004;291:1763-1768. 

Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death in US women and is responsible for as many deaths as breast cancer and all gynecological cancers combined. Most lung cancer is caused by cigarette smoke. Despite all that is known about the devastating effects of cigarettes, one quarter of women in the United States continue to smoke. Women are targeted in tobacco advertising, and teenage girls are often drawn to cigarette smoking under a variety of social pressures. 

Following the increase in smoking, the death rate from lung cancer in US women rose 600% from 1930 to 1997. Women may be more susceptible than men to the carcinogenic properties of cigarette smoke. In addition, differences in the biology of lung cancer exist between the 2 sexes with higher levels of DNA adduct formation, increased CYP1A1 expression, decreased DNA repair capacity, and increased incidence of K-ras gene mutations in women. The novel estrogen receptor has also been detected in lung tumors and suggests that estrogen signaling may have a biological role in tumorigenesis. Given these differences and given the enormous toll this disease has on US women, undertaking sex-specific research in lung cancer is crucial. Finally, disseminating information about this epidemic may prevent a similar epidemic in other parts of the world where women are just now becoming addicted to tobacco.