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Socio-economic deprivation and cancer incidence in England: Quantifying the role of smoking

Nick Payne, Katrina Brown, Christine Delon, Yannis Kotrotsios, Isabelle Soerjomataram, Jon Shelton

2022PLoS ONE30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: More deprived populations typically experience higher cancer incidence rates and smoking prevalence compared to less deprived populations. We calculated the proportion of cancer cases attributable to smoking by socio-economic deprivation in England and estimated the impact smoking has on the deprivation gap for cancer incidence. METHODS: Data for cancer incidence (2013-2017), smoking prevalence (2003-2007) and population estimates (2013-2017) were split by sex, age-group and deprivation quintile. Relative risk estimates from meta-analyses were used to estimate the population attributable fraction (PAF) for 15 cancer types associated with smoking. The deprivation gap was calculated using age-specific incidence rates by deprivation quintile. RESULTS: Smoking-related cancer PAFs in England are 2.2 times larger in the most deprived quintile compared to the least deprived quintile (from 9.7% to 21.1%). If everyone had the same smoking prevalence as the least deprived quintile, 20% of the deprivation gap in cancer incidence could have been prevented. If nobody smoked, 61% of the deprivation gap could have been prevented. CONCLUSIONS: The majority of the deprivation gap in cancer incidence could have been prevented in England between 2013-2017 if nobody had smoked. Policy makers should ensure that tobacco control policies reduce overall smoking prevalence by tackling smoking inequalities.

Topics & Concepts

Incidence (geometry)MedicineDemographySocial deprivationPopulationCancerAttributable risknobodyTobacco controlEnvironmental healthPublic healthInternal medicinePathologyComputer scienceEconomic growthOperating systemEconomicsPhysicsOpticsSociologySmoking Behavior and CessationGlobal Cancer Incidence and ScreeningHealthcare Systems and Challenges
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