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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Overview
- Lung cancer in the world
- Histology of lung cancer
- Cancer deaths by type, world, 2017
- Lung cancer incidence rates, male
- Lung cancer incidence rates, female
- Lung cancer in the world, 2018
- Lung cancer in the world by sex, 2018
- Estimated lung cancer mortality, USA, 2020
- Incidence rates by sex, USA, 1975–2016
- Risk factors for lung cancer
- Protective factors for lung cancer
- Smoking and lung cancer
- Global cigarette consumption, 1880–2009
- Adult tobacco smoking prevalence, 2007–2017
- WHO-estimated trend in current smoking prevalence
- Global trends in tobacco use, 2000–2016
- Smoking prevalence and lung cancer mortality in the USA
- Adult per capita cigarette consumption and major smoking and health events, USA, 1900–2012
- Smoking and lung cancer mortality rate trends in the USA
- Standardized incidence of lung cancer by gender and histology, 1973–2010
- 50-year trends in smoking-related lung cancer and COPD mortality in the USA
- Smoking and burden of chronic respiratory diseases, 1990–2017
- Secondhand smoke (SHS) (1)
- Secondhand smoke (SHS) (2)
- SHS exposure & early-stage lung cancer survival
- International Lung Cancer Consortium (ILCCO)
- ILCCO participating studies
- ILCCO study: SHS exposure and lung cancer (1)
- ILCCO study: SHS exposure and lung cancer (2)
- ILCCO study: tobacco smoking and (BAC) / AIC (1)
- ILCCO study: tobacco smoking and (BAC) / AIC (2)
- ILCO study: hormone use and lung cancer risk in women (1)
- ILCO study: hormone use and lung cancer risk in women (2)
- ILCCO study: NSAIDs use and lung cancer risk (1)
- ILCCO study: NSAIDs use and lung cancer risk (2)
- Air pollution and lung cancer (1)
- Air pollution and lung cancer (2)
- Air pollution and lung cancer (3)
- Air pollution and lung cancer: the global picture
- Air pollution and lung cancer: GBD 2015
- 25-year trends in population-weighted mean PM2.5
- PM2.5 exposure-response functions
- Deaths attributable to PM2.5 air pollution
- Particulate Matter (PM) standards
- Radon and lung cancer
- EPA map of radon zones
- Radon in homes and lung cancer risk (1)
- Radon in homes and lung cancer risk (2)
- Radon in homes and lung cancer mortality
- Residential radon and lung cancer in never smokers
- Global estimate of lung cancer mortality attributable to residential radon
- Asbestos and lung cancer
- Asbestos, asbestosis, smoking and lung cancer
- Smoking cessation and lung cancer mortality
- Crystalline silica exposure and lung cancer
- Crystalline silica, smoking and lung cancer (1)
- Crystalline silica, smoking and lung cancer (2)
- Update on the genetics of lung cancer
- GXE interaction leads to lung cancer
- GXE interaction on lung cancer: GSTP1 x smoking
- GWAS on lung cancer susceptibility
- Genome-wide interaction study (GWIS) (1)
- Genome-wide interaction study (GWIS) (2)
- GWAS of INDELS and lung cancer risk (1)
- GWAS of INDELS and lung cancer risk (2)
- GWAS of INDELS and lung cancer risk (3)
- GWAS: multiple loci influencing lung cancer risk
- Multi-omics analysis
- Smoking, COPD and lung cancer
- Smoking and co-existing NSCLC with COPD
- Smoking and risk of NSCLC-COPD
- Dose-response analysis of the risk of NSCLC-COPD with smoking dosages
- Co-existing NSCLC-COPD and survival outcomes (1)
- Co-existing NSCLC-COPD and survival outcomes (2)
- Future directions
- Summary: lung cancer in the world
- Summary: risk factors for lung cancer
- Summary: update on the epidemiology of lung cancer
- Thank you
Topics Covered
- Lung cancer in the world
- Smoking
- Secondhand smoke
- International Lung Cancer Consortium (ILCCO)
- Air pollution
- Radon
- Asbestos
- Genetics of lung cancer
Links
Series:
Categories:
Therapeutic Areas:
External Links
- American Lung Association: types of lung cancer
- What are the risk factors for lung cancer?
- Lung cancer prevention
- Surgeon General Report, 2014
- CDC grand rounds: global tobacco control
- WHO report on the global tobacco epidemic, 2019
- Our World in Data: smoking
- Overall tobacco trends
- International Lung Cancer Consortium (ILCCO)
- Map of the current ILCCO studies
- GBD | Vis Hub
- Particulate Matter (PM) standards – Table of historical PM NAAQS
- Four new risk loci for lung cancer identified (figure)
Talk Citation
Christiani, D. (2022, January 31). Molecular epidemiology of lung cancer [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved November 23, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/WFJY5688.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Dr. Christiani has served as a paid expert on behalf of victims (plaintiff) cases against tobacco companies.
A selection of talks on Clinical Practice
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
Hello, I'm Dr. David Christiani,
I'm the Elkan Blout Professor of Environmental Genetics at the Harvard Chan School of Public Health,
and Professor of Medicine at
Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital, in Boston.
0:15
It's my pleasure today to speak about an update in the epidemiology of lung cancer.
We know much about the epidemiology of lung cancer
from studies that began in the US and the UK,
back in the 50s, but our nuanced understanding has evolved in the recent decade or so.
And for that, I want to update you today and give a global perspective,
review risk and protective factors for lung cancer
and review where we're at with lung cancer and tobacco smoking,
given insights from consortium studies that encompass large numbers of people,
participant numbers that are much larger than the original studies in the 50s and 60s,
add new information on genetic susceptibility factors
and wrap up with future directions.
1:03
Lung cancer remains the most common cancer worldwide, excluding skin cancer,
accounting for 2.1 million new cases and
1.8 million deaths in 2018.
Worldwide, lung cancer remains the leading cause of
cancer death in men and the second leading cause in women,
and in higher-income countries,
it is now the leading cause of death in women, as well.
About 58 percent of lung cancer cases occurred in
low and middle-income countries as of 2018,
so the impact is now much more global than before.
Smoking remains the principal cause of lung cancer in the world,
but in some areas, other environmental causes are very important.
Now, when we look at lung cancer types,