Post‐diagnosis smoking habit change and incident dementia in cancer survivors

INTRODUCTION Many individuals change their smoking habits after cancer diagnosis. We aimed to evaluate the association of post‐diagnosis smoking habit change with incident dementia in cancer survivors. METHODS We identified 558,127 individuals who were diagnosed with cancer at age ≥ 20 and survived...

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Published inAlzheimer's & dementia Vol. 20; no. 10; pp. 7013 - 7023
Main Authors Lee, Hyeok‐Hee, Ahn, Jaeun, Jiang, Changchuan, Lee, Young‐gun, Kim, Hyeon Chang, Lee, Hokyou
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States John Wiley and Sons Inc 01.10.2024
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Summary:INTRODUCTION Many individuals change their smoking habits after cancer diagnosis. We aimed to evaluate the association of post‐diagnosis smoking habit change with incident dementia in cancer survivors. METHODS We identified 558,127 individuals who were diagnosed with cancer at age ≥ 20 and survived for ≥ 3 years. Participants were classified into four groups: (1) sustained non‐smokers, (2) initiators/relapsers, (3) quitters, and (4) continuing smokers. Dementia risk in each group was assessed using a cause‐specific Cox model. RESULTS After cancer diagnosis, 2.3% of pre‐diagnosis non‐smokers initiated/relapsed into smoking, while 51.7% of pre‐diagnosis smokers quit smoking. Compared to sustained non‐smokers, multivariable‐adjusted risk of dementia was 29% higher among initiators/relapsers, 11% higher among quitters, and 31% higher among continuing smokers. Compared to continuing smokers, the risk was 15% lower among quitters. DISCUSSION In cancer survivors, smoking initiation/relapse was associated with increased risk of dementia, whereas smoking cessation was associated with decreased risk of dementia. Highlights Approximately half of pre‐diagnosis smokers quit smoking after a cancer diagnosis. Smoking cessation was associated with a 15% reduced risk of dementia. More than 2% of pre‐diagnosis non‐smokers initiated or relapsed into smoking after a cancer diagnosis. Smoking initiation/relapse was associated with a 29% elevated risk of dementia.
Bibliography:Hyeok‐Hee Lee and Jaeun Ahn contributed equally to this study as co‐first authors.
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ISSN:1552-5260
1552-5279
1552-5279
DOI:10.1002/alz.14180