Study: 87% of excess lung cancer risk eliminated if smokers quit before age 45
Smokers who kick the habit before age 45 can nearly eliminate their excess risk of dying from lung or other cancers, a new study estimates.
It’s well-established that after smokers quit, their risk of tobacco-related cancers drops substantially over time.
And if they overcame the habit by age 35, their excess risk of cancer death was erased, said Blake Thomson, a researcher at the American Cancer Society who led the study.
He stressed that it’s never too late to quit. Smokers who quit in their 50s to early 60s also substantially lowered their excess risk of cancer death.
But the findings do underscore the power of kicking the habit as early as possible.
“If you’re a smoker in your 30s, hopefully these findings will speak to you,” Thomson said.
The study was published this month in the journal JAMA Oncology. It looked at data on more than 410,000 Americans who entered an ongoing federal health survey between 1997 and 2014.
Much, however, depended on age — the age at which smokers both started and quit.
The younger people started smoking, the greater their risk of eventually dying from cancer. Among those who started before age 18, the risk of dying from cancer was increased at least three-fold.
When people started smoking before age 10, their risk of cancer death was quadrupled versus lifelong nonsmokers.
It may sound surprising, Thomson noted, but there are smokers who get hooked that early in life.
For people who pick up the habit at a tender age, “it’s imperative that they quit as soon as possible,” Thomson said.
That’s because overall, his team estimates, smokers who quit before age 35 wiped out their excess risk of dying from cancer. Meanwhile, those who quit before age 45 slashed their excess risk by 87%.
The outlook was also good for smokers who quit later. If they managed to do so between the ages of 45 and 54, their excess risk was cut by 78%, and by 56% if they quit between the ages of 55 and 64.
He said doctors should help patients kick the habit as early as possible, but also “never give up” trying to quit.
“Sometimes an individual has to quit multiple times to stay off tobacco products permanently,” said Cooke, who is also a professor of general thoracic surgery at the University of California, Davis Health.
In general, he said, smokers fare better when they get some help in the effort, whether from their doctor or through free government “quitlines,” which operate in every state. In a recent study, Cooke and his colleagues found that participating in California’s free quitline boosted quit rates among smokers seen at their clinic.
That kind of support, Thomson said, can help people sort out their smoking-cessation options. These include two prescription medications and over-the-counter nicotine replacement products, like gums and patches.
Smoking raises the risk of numerous cancers, Thomson noted — including colon, kidney, bladder, stomach and pancreatic cancer. But lung cancer is the top cancer killer among smokers.
Some former smokers who’ve quit within the past 15 years still qualify for annual CT scans to screen for lung cancer — depending on their age and how heavily they smoked in the past.
The American Lung Association has resources to help smokers quit.
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