The Sunday Guardian

Cancer mortality linked to pollution

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Air pollution may shorten survival chances in patients with lung cancer detected at an early stage of the disease, particular­ly adenocarci­noma, according to a study.

Adenocarci­noma is the most common type of nonsmall cell lung cancer, which accounts for 80% of lung cancer cases.

Air pollution has been linked to a higher incidence of lung cancer and death, but little is known about its potential impact on an individual’s chances of survival after diagnosis.

To clarify this, the researcher­s tracked the health outcomes of more than 3,52,000 people newly diagnosed with lung cancer with an average age of 69.

More than half (53%) of the cancers were diagnosed at an advanced stage (distant spread) and the average survival time for early stage disease was 3.6 years.

For patients with early stage disease, average survival time was shortest for those with small and large cell cancers (around 1.5 years) and longest for those with adenocarci­noma (around 5 years).

Participan­ts’ average exposure to nitrogen dioxide (NO2), ozone (O3), particulat­e matter of less than 10 um (micrometre) and less than 2.5 um, in diameter (PM10 and PM2.5) was calculated using data from air quality monitoring stations, mapped to area of residence.

Almost half of the study participan­ts (45.4%) lived more than 1,500 metres away from a major interstate motorway while less than 10% lived within a 300 metre radius of one.

Their risk of death from any cause was then estimated, based on disease stage and tumour cell type.

“After taking account of these, and other potentiall­y influentia­l factors, the calculatio­ns showed that higher exposures to each of the four pollutants were associated with a correspond­ingly heightened risk of death and shorter average and five-year survivals,” said Jaime E. Hart, researcher at the Harvard Medical School in the study published in the journal Thorax. But the magnitude of heightened risk was greatest for patients with early stage disease, among whom average survival was 2.4 years for those with high PM2.5 exposure (at least 16 ug/m3) and 5.7 years for those with low exposure (less than 10 ug/m3).

Overall, for patients with early stage disease, risk of death from any cause was 30% greater for NO2; 26% greater for PM10; and 38 per cent greater for PM2.5. The impact of exposure to O3 was small (4%). IANS

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