Smoking and urinary bladder cancer: A case-control study in Basrah

Background: The primary and well established risk factor for urinary bladder cancer is cigarette smoking. ‎ Objective: The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the association between cigarette smoking and the ‎development of urinary bladder cancer in Basrah.‎ Methods: A case control study w...

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Main Authors: Abdulkader Abdulwahab Al-Shakour, Lamia M. Al-Naama, Narjis A-H Ajeel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Basrah 2014-06-01
Series:The Medical Journal of Basrah University
Subjects:
Online Access:https://mjbu.uobasrah.edu.iq/article_94415_eb8d6d57b66f573a5ec17a81cac9e635.pdf
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spelling doaj-461e01c12fd041aaa1aaa68a11a0992a2020-11-25T03:03:17ZengUniversity of BasrahThe Medical Journal of Basrah University 0253-07592413-44142014-06-013211710.33762/mjbu.2014.9441594415Smoking and urinary bladder cancer: A case-control study in BasrahAbdulkader Abdulwahab Al-ShakourLamia M. Al-NaamaNarjis A-H AjeelBackground: The primary and well established risk factor for urinary bladder cancer is cigarette smoking. ‎ Objective: The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the association between cigarette smoking and the ‎development of urinary bladder cancer in Basrah.‎ Methods: A case control study was conducted to examine the association between the risk of urinary bladder cancer and ‎various characteristics of smoking: the smoking status (current or ex-smoker), smoking intensity (cigarette per day), ‎duration, total exposure (pack-years), type of cigarette (filtered or unfiltered), inhalation, and environmental tobacco ‎smoke exposure. The study population composed of 87 patients with newly diagnosed bladder cancer cases and 357 ‎controls. Cases and controls were matched for age, sex, and residence.‎ Results: An increased risk of urinary bladder cancer was found for both current and ex-smoker (for current smoker OR ‎‎= 2.98; 95% CI = 1.68-5.28 and for ex-smoker OR = 4.05; 95% CI = 2.19-7.48). The study also revealed a significant ‎positive trend in urinary bladder cancer risk with smoking intensity, pack-years, and environmental tobacco smoke. ‎ Conclusion: The results of the present study are consistent with the findings of the previous epidemiological studies and ‎confirm that smoking is a major risk factor for urinary bladder cancer and preventive strategies should be directed ‎toward smoking as risk factor for urinary bladder cancer in Basrah. ‎https://mjbu.uobasrah.edu.iq/article_94415_eb8d6d57b66f573a5ec17a81cac9e635.pdfsmokingurinary bladder cancer
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Abdulkader Abdulwahab Al-Shakour
Lamia M. Al-Naama
Narjis A-H Ajeel
spellingShingle Abdulkader Abdulwahab Al-Shakour
Lamia M. Al-Naama
Narjis A-H Ajeel
Smoking and urinary bladder cancer: A case-control study in Basrah
The Medical Journal of Basrah University
smoking
urinary bladder cancer
author_facet Abdulkader Abdulwahab Al-Shakour
Lamia M. Al-Naama
Narjis A-H Ajeel
author_sort Abdulkader Abdulwahab Al-Shakour
title Smoking and urinary bladder cancer: A case-control study in Basrah
title_short Smoking and urinary bladder cancer: A case-control study in Basrah
title_full Smoking and urinary bladder cancer: A case-control study in Basrah
title_fullStr Smoking and urinary bladder cancer: A case-control study in Basrah
title_full_unstemmed Smoking and urinary bladder cancer: A case-control study in Basrah
title_sort smoking and urinary bladder cancer: a case-control study in basrah
publisher University of Basrah
series The Medical Journal of Basrah University
issn 0253-0759
2413-4414
publishDate 2014-06-01
description Background: The primary and well established risk factor for urinary bladder cancer is cigarette smoking. ‎ Objective: The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the association between cigarette smoking and the ‎development of urinary bladder cancer in Basrah.‎ Methods: A case control study was conducted to examine the association between the risk of urinary bladder cancer and ‎various characteristics of smoking: the smoking status (current or ex-smoker), smoking intensity (cigarette per day), ‎duration, total exposure (pack-years), type of cigarette (filtered or unfiltered), inhalation, and environmental tobacco ‎smoke exposure. The study population composed of 87 patients with newly diagnosed bladder cancer cases and 357 ‎controls. Cases and controls were matched for age, sex, and residence.‎ Results: An increased risk of urinary bladder cancer was found for both current and ex-smoker (for current smoker OR ‎‎= 2.98; 95% CI = 1.68-5.28 and for ex-smoker OR = 4.05; 95% CI = 2.19-7.48). The study also revealed a significant ‎positive trend in urinary bladder cancer risk with smoking intensity, pack-years, and environmental tobacco smoke. ‎ Conclusion: The results of the present study are consistent with the findings of the previous epidemiological studies and ‎confirm that smoking is a major risk factor for urinary bladder cancer and preventive strategies should be directed ‎toward smoking as risk factor for urinary bladder cancer in Basrah. ‎
topic smoking
urinary bladder cancer
url https://mjbu.uobasrah.edu.iq/article_94415_eb8d6d57b66f573a5ec17a81cac9e635.pdf
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