Titre : | Lung cancer and indoor pollution from heating and cooking with solid fuels : The IARC international multicentre case-control study in eastern/central Europe and the United Kingdom. (2005) |
Auteurs : | Jolanta LISSOWSKA ; Alicja BARDIN-MIKOLAJCZAK ; Paolo BOFFETTA ; Paul BRENNAN ; Adrian CASSIDY ; Eleonora FABIANOVA ; Tony FLETCHE ; Ivana HOLCATOVA ; Vladimir JANOUT ; Andreat MANNETJE ; Dana MATES ; Peter RUDNAI ; Neonila SZESZENLA-DABROWSKA ; Vera VITOVA ; David ZARIDZE ; Cancer Center. Department of Epidemiology and Cancer Prevention. Warsaw. POL ; London Scool of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Public and Environmental Health Research Unit. London. GBR ; M Sklodowska-Curie Institute of Oncology. Warsaw. POL |
Type de document : | Article |
Dans : | American journal of epidemiology (vol. 162, n° 4, 2005) |
Pagination : | 326-333 |
Langues: | Anglais |
Mots-clés : | Santé environnementale ; Tumeur ; Pollution atmosphérique ; Chauffage ; Cuisson ; Combustible ; Enquête cas témoin ; Epidémiologie ; Europe de l'Est ; Europe ; Royaume Uni ; Homme ; Appareil respiratoire [pathologie] |
Résumé : | [BDSP. Notice produite par INIST-CNRS 0R0xiBu7. Diffusion soumise à autorisation]. Exposure to fuel from cooking and heating has not been studied in Europe, where lung cancer rates are high and many residents have had a long tradition of burning coal and unprocessed biomass. Study subjects included 2,861 cases and 3,118 controls recruited during 1998-2002 in the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Russia, Slovakia, and the United Kingdom. The odds ratio of lung cancer associated with solid fuel use was 1.22 (95% confidence interval (Cl) : 1.04,1.44) for cooking or heating, 1.37 (95% Cl : 0.90,2.09) for solid fuel only for cooking, and 1.24 (95% Cl : 1.05,1.47) for solid fuels used for both cooking and heating. Risk increased relative to the percentage of time that solid fuel was used for cooking (rhôtrend |