The neoplastic impact of tobacco-free betel-quid on the histological type and the anatomical site of aerodigestive tract cancers

Chien-Hung Lee, Ka-Wo Lee, Fu-Min Fang, Deng-Chyang Wu, Shih-Meng Tsai, Ping-Ho Chen, Tien-Yu Shieh, Chung-Ho Chen, I-Chen Wu, Hsiao-Ling Huang, Bai-Hsiun Chen, Cheng-Hsien Chang, Mu-Kuan Chen, Shah-Hwa Chou, Yi-Shan Tsai, Shang-Lun Chiang, Ying-Chin Ko

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal Article peer-review

46 Scopus citations

Abstract

Little is known about any consequences of swallowing tobacco-free betel-quid (TF-BQ) juice/remnants following chewing and its carcinogenic impact on the upper aerodigestive tract (UADT) to gastrointestinal tract (GIT). We investigated the neoplastic impact of TF-BQ on different anatomical locations along UADT and GIT, and differences according to their histological categories. We conducted a multicenter casecontrol study examining patients with 2,163 pathology-proven UADT and GIT cancers, comparing them with 2,250 control subjects. Generalized additive models, piecewise regression and polytomous logistic models were applied to identify possible dose-dependent structures and cancer risks. Contrary to nonsignificant GIT-adenocarcinoma risk (aOR = 0.9), TF-BQ users experienced a 1.7- to 16.2-fold higher risk of UADT-squamous cell carcinomas than nonusers, with the peak risk discovered in oral neoplasms. We separately observed a curvilinear and linear TF-BQ dose-risk relationship in oral/pharyngeal/esophageal and laryngeal cancers. Chewers of betel inflorescence were generally at a greater UADT cancer risk. A higher first-piecewise increased risk of esophageal cancer was recognized among areca-fluid swallowers than among nonswallowers (continuous aOR = 1.12 vs. 1.03). TF-BQ use accounted for 66.178.7% and 17.833.2% of the cases of oral/pharyngeal and esophageal/laryngeal cancers, respectively. However, a reduction from heavy TF-BQ consumption to low-to-moderate consumption only reduced 11.334.6% of etiologic fraction of oral/pharyngeal cancers. Alcohol supra-additively modified the risk of TF-BQ in determining the development of oral, pharyngeal and esophageal cancers. In conclusion, the interplay of TF-BQ and alcohol/tobacco use, combined with how chewing habit is practiced, influences carcinogenic consequences on anatomically diverse sites of UADT and GIT cancers, and histologically different types.
Original languageAmerican English
JournalInternational Journal of Cancer
Volume131
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - 2012

Keywords

  • ALCOHOL-CONSUMPTION
  • ARECA NUT
  • ARECOLINE
  • CARCINOGENETIC IMPACT
  • CELL CARCINOMA RISK
  • CIGARETTE-SMOKING
  • DNA-ADDUCTS
  • ESOPHAGEAL CANCER
  • ORAL-CANCER
  • TAIWAN
  • alcohol drinking
  • anatomical site
  • areca nut
  • gastrointestinal cancer
  • tobacco smoking
  • upper aerodigestive cancer

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