Elsevier

Cancer Epidemiology

Volume 78, June 2022, 101913
Cancer Epidemiology

Patterns and associations of smoking and electronic cigarette use among survivors of tobacco related and non-tobacco related cancers: A nationally representative cross-sectional analysis

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.canep.2021.101913Get rights and content

Highlights

  • Survivors of tobacco-related cancers have a higher prevalence of current cigarette smoking, e-cigarette, and dual use compared to survivors of non-tobacco related cancers.

  • There was a sequential increase in cigarette use during each subsequent year from the time of a new cancer diagnosis.

  • There remains the need for long term tobacco cessation support among newly diagnosed adults with cancer.

Abstract

Background

Tobacco-use among cancer survivors leads to preventable morbidity, mortality, and increased healthcare costs. We sought to explore the prevalence of smoking and e-cigarette use among survivors of tobacco and non-tobacco related cancers.

Methods

A cross-sectional analysis was conducted using the 2015–2018 National Health Interview Survey. Our primary outcome was the prevalence of current cigarette smoking or e-cigarette use among adults with self-reported history of tobacco related or non-tobacco related cancer. Logistic regression analysis was to assess the association of reported cancer type with cigarette smoking or e-cigarette use. Secondary outcomes included yearly trends and dual use.

Results

A total of 12,984 respondents reported a history of cancer, representing a weighted estimate of 5,060,059 individuals with a history of tobacco-related malignancy and 17,583,788 with a history of a tobacco and non-tobacco related cancer, respectively. Survivors of tobacco-related cancers had a significantly higher prevalence of current cigarette use (18.2 % vs 9.7 %, P < 0.0001), e-cigarette use (2.7 % vs 1.6 %, P < 0.0001) and similar rates of dual use. The prevalence of cigarette smoking among all survivors increased as time increased from the year of diagnosis up to 2 years post-diagnosis (P = 0.047). Odds of reporting current cigarette smoking use was higher for survivors of tobacco-related cancers, adjusted for sociodemographic factors (OR1.69, 95 % CI 1.44−1.99).

Conclusions

Survivors of tobacco-related cancers have a higher prevalence of current cigarette smoking and e-cigarette use compared to survivors of non-tobacco related cancers. There was a sequential increase in the prevalence of cigarette use during each subsequent year from the time of a new cancer diagnosis, underscoring the need for long term tobacco cessation support among newly diagnosed adults with cancer.

Introduction

Smoking is the leading preventable cause of cancer and cancer deaths in the US with 40 % of all incident cancers being tobacco-related [1]. Despite evidence that continued smoking places all cancer survivors at increased risk for worse outcomes, regardless of whether their initial cancer was smoking related, up to 64 % continue to smoke [2] and 26 % use e-cigarettes [3,4]. Continued smoking is associated with lower survival, higher rates of recurrent disease, an increase in secondary malignancies, poorer response to cancer treatment, and increased treatment-related complications [5,6], ultimately leading to significantly increased costs associated with cancer treatment [5,7,8].

In the last decade, electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes) use has risen among cancer survivors. This increase has been seen among non-smokers and combustible cigarette smokers alike [9] even though the carcinogenic potential of e-cigarette use is not yet fully understood [3,9,10]. Despite being thought of as a safer alternative to traditional tobacco use, e-cigarette use has been linked to several smoking related malignancies including lung, head and neck, and bladder cancer [[11], [12], [13]]. Therefore, their use has become an important concern among cancer providers.

After a cancer diagnosis, survivors of tobacco-related cancers have different patterns of tobacco use and quit rates compared to survivors of non-tobacco related malignancies [2,14,15]. Smoking prior to a cancer diagnosis has been shown to be more than 20 % higher among tobacco-related cancer survivors [14,15]. Furthermore, smoking cessation approaches vary significantly where counseling is offered twice as often among tobacco-related cancer survivors while pharmacotherapy is prescribed less frequently to survivors of non-tobacco related cancers [15]. Patterns of e-cigarette use among cancer survivors have been unclear, however, emerging data suggest an increase in use; the majority who report using e-cigarettes do so to aid in smoking cessation, but with limited success [16,17]. The rise in their use may additionally reflect, in part, a perceived harm reduction approach to switch to potentially lower-risk tobacco products [[18], [19], [20]].

The primary objective of this study is to determine factors associated with continued cigarette and e-cigarette use among tobacco-related and non-tobacco-related cancer survivors. We hypothesize that compared to survivors of non-tobacco related cancers, survivors of tobacco related cancers are less likely to continue to use cigarettes. Additionally, we also hypothesize that survivors of tobacco related cancers are more likely to use e-cigarettes. As a secondary study objective, we sought to assess contemporary patterns of cigarette and e-cigarette use over time. Understanding patterns of use relative to time since diagnosis and cancer type may inform smoking cessation strategies that can be integrated with long-term comprehensive cancer care.

Section snippets

Study design/data source

We used the National Health Interview Survey (NHIS), which is a repeat cross-sectional, population-based, face-to-face survey conducted annually by the National Center for Health Statistics. Survey participation is voluntary, and the US Census Bureau implements data collection using trained interviewers. NHIS employs a multistage area probability sampling design. The final weights are adjusted according to age, sex, race, and ethnicity classes based on population estimates produced by the US

Results

A total of 12,984 respondents reported a history of cancer, representing a weighted estimate of 5,060,059 individuals with a history of tobacco-related malignancy and 17,583,788 with a history of a non-tobacco related malignancy in the US population. The sociodemographic characteristics of respondents with tobacco-related cancers and non-tobacco cancers are shown in Table 1.

Discussion

Despite the well documented health risks of continued smoking after the diagnosis of cancer, we found survivors of tobacco related cancers had a higher odds of reporting current smoking compared to survivors of non-tobacco related cancers. Our findings may be explained by several factors. First, we hypothesized that survivors of tobacco related cancers are less likely to continue to smoke as prior studies observed significantly higher quit smoking rates after a malignancy diagnosis among

Conclusion

In this cross-sectional, nationally representative study, survivors of tobacco related cancers had a higher prevalence of cigarette and e-cigarette use compared to survivors of non-tobacco related cancers. Prevalence of tobacco use was higher in adult cancer survivors for each year after diagnosis. These findings highlight the need for smoking cessation and abstinence support among cancer survivors.

Author contributions

MAB, RB, and RSM conceived and designed the initial analysis. All authors contributed to subsequent revisions of the analysis. MAB, RB, RSM, collected and analyzed the data. MAB, RB, and RSM wrote the initial draft of the article. All authors provided critical revisions to the article.

CRediT authorship contribution statement

Marc A. Bjurlin: Conceptualization, Data curation, Formal analysis, Investigation, Methodology, Project administration, Supervision, Writing - original draft, Writing - review & editing. Ramsankar Basak: Conceptualization, Data curation, Formal analysis, Investigation, Methodology, Resources, Software, Supervision, Validation, Visualization, Writing - original draft, Writing - review & editing. Ibardo Zambrano: Investigation, Writing - review & editing. Daniel Schatz: Investigation, Writing -

Declaration of Competing Interest

The authors report no declarations of interest.

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    Funding: Supported by the New York State, Department of Health, Empire Clinical Research Investigator Program.

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