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Abstract
Purpose
The majority of
previous studies have observed an increased risk of mucinous ovarian
tumors associated with cigarette smoking, but the association with other
histological types is unclear. In a large pooled analysis, we examined
the risk of epithelial ovarian cancer associated with multiple measures
of cigarette smoking with a focus on characterizing risks according to
tumor behavior and histology.
Methods
We used data from 21
case–control studies of ovarian cancer (19,066 controls, 11,972 invasive
and 2,752 borderline cases). Study-specific odds ratios (OR) and 95 %
confidence intervals (CI) were obtained from logistic regression models
and combined into a pooled odds ratio using a random effects model.
Results
Current cigarette
smoking increased the risk of invasive mucinous (OR = 1.31; 95 % CI:
1.03–1.65) and borderline mucinous ovarian tumors (OR = 1.83; 95 % CI:
1.39–2.41), while former smoking increased the risk of borderline serous
ovarian tumors (OR = 1.30; 95 % CI: 1.12–1.50). For these histological
types, consistent dose–response associations were observed. No
convincing associations between smoking and risk of invasive serous and
endometrioid ovarian cancer were observed, while our results provided
some evidence of a decreased risk of invasive clear cell ovarian cancer.
Conclusions
Our results revealed
marked differences in the risk profiles of histological types of ovarian
cancer with regard to cigarette smoking, although the magnitude of the
observed associations was modest. Our findings, which may reflect
different etiologies of the histological types, add to the fact that
ovarian cancer is a heterogeneous disease.
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