Abstract

The effects of selection, confounding, misclassification and bias must be eliminated from case-control studies of ‘passive smoking’ and lung cancer before a meaningful interpretation can be made. Misclassification includes the misclassification of the subject's non-smoking status, of the disease status or of the spouse's smoking habits. This paper shows that inflation of the amount smoked by the husbands of female lung cancer cases may have accounted for the apparent ‘dose-response’ relationships in 3 widely referenced case-control studies.

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