Neighborhood disadvantage and lung cancer risk in a national cohort of never smoking Black women
Menée à l'aide de données portant sur 37 650 femmes afro-américaines n'ayant jamais fumé (période de suivi : 1995-2018), cette étude analyse l'association entre des facteurs environnementaux dans une zone d'habitation défavorisée (exposition au tabagisme passif ou aux particules fines) et le risque de cancer du poumon (77 cas)
Background: Compared to women of other races who have never smoked, Black women have a higher risk of lung cancer. Whether neighborhood disadvantage, which Black women experience at higher rates than other women, is linked to never-smoking lung cancer risk remains unclear. This study investigates the association of neighborhood disadvantage and lung cancer risk in Black never-smoking women. Methods and Materials: This research utilized data from the Black Women’s Health Study, a prospective cohort of 59,000 Black women recruited from across the US in 1995 and followed by biennial questionnaires. Associations of lung cancer incidence with neighborhood-level factors (including two composite variables derived from Census Bureau data: neighborhood socioeconomic status and neighborhood concentrated disadvantage), secondhand smoke exposure, and PM2.5 were estimated using Fine-Gray subdistribution hazard models. Results: Among 37,650 never-smokers, 77 were diagnosed with lung cancer during follow-up from 1995 to 2018. The adjusted subdistribution hazard ratio (sHR) of lung cancer incidence with ten unit increase in neighborhood concentrated disadvantage index was 1.30 (95% CI: 1.04, 1.63, p=0.023). Exposure to secondhand smoke at work was associated with increased risk (sHR = 1.93, 95% CI: 1.21, 3.10, p=0.006), but exposure to secondhand smoke at home and PM2.5 was not. Conclusion: Worse neighborhood concentrated disadvantage was associated with increased lung cancer risk in Black women who never smoked. These findings suggest that non-tobacco-related factors in disadvantaged neighborhoods may be linked to lung cancer risk in Black women and that these factors must be understood and targeted to achieve health equity.
Lung Cancer 2022