Mr. Law et al., THE DOSE-RESPONSE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN CIGARETTE CONSUMPTION, BIOCHEMICAL MARKERS AND RISK OF LUNG-CANCER, British Journal of Cancer, 75(11), 1997, pp. 1690-1693
The relationship between the number of cigarettes smoked per day and t
he incidence of lung cancer is linear but, from the multistage model o
f carcinogenesis, it should be quadratic (upwards curving). We investi
gated this anomaly in a study of 11 403 male never smokers and current
smokers in whom carboxyhaemoglobin (COHb) was measured in all and ser
um cotinine in 1175. The relationship between the biochemical markers
and the reported number of cigarettes per day was approximately linear
up to 20 cigarettes per day as expected. But above 20 cigarettes per
day the marker levels increased less steeply and were 35% lower than e
xpected in men who smoked more than 40 cigarettes per day. Less smoke
is inhaled from each cigarette by men with high daily cigarette consum
ption than by men with lower consumption. Allowance for this transform
s the observed linear dose-response relationship into one consistent w
ith the expected quadratic relationship. The anomaly is explained by t
he observation that heavier smokers inhale less smoke from each cigare
tte.