Abstract

Detailed smoking history of patients developing lung cancer is rarely known, especially not for users of hand-rolled cigarettes. In Norway, smoking hand-rolled tobacco is still popular, accounting for one-third of the total tobacco consume. A questionnaire-based study revealing detailed information about tobacco consume with consecutive inclusion of all persons developing lung cancer in Southern Norway 2002-2005. In this unselected population with 479 patients with newly diagnosed lung cancer, 95% had a smoking history and 88% of ever-smokers had smoked primarily hand-rolled cigarettes. The hand-rolled cigarette smokers had smoked fewer cigarettes daily (15) and less pack-years of tobacco (34) than fabricated cigarette smokers (20, P < 0.0001 and 42, P = 0.021, respectively). Smoking hand-rolled cigarettes was considerably more frequent than expected from official sales statistics. Hand-rolled cigarette smoking revealed an odds ratio of 13 for developing lung cancer compared with smoking fabricated cigarettes. In this unselected population with newly diagnosed lung cancer, nine out of 10 ever-smokers had smoked primarily hand-rolled cigarettes. Patients smoking hand-rolled cigarettes had a smoking history of fewer daily cigarettes and less pack-years tobacco consumed than fabricated cigarette smokers. In this study, hand-rolled cigarettes are more frequently used than shown in national statistics. Smokers of hand-rolled cigarettes may have a greatly increased risk for lung cancer compared with smokers of fabricated cigarettes.

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