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Riesgo casi 0 si fumas 1-2 puros al día. (Estudio FDA)

Tema en 'General' comenzado por Triple maduro, 23 de Agosto de 2019.

  1. Triple maduro

    Triple maduro Corona

    Mensajes:
    36
    Con el interés de aportar y a solicitud de compañeros del foro en un hilo pasado les dejo este análisis. (Lamentó no tener el tiempo de traducirlo).

    The Food and Drug Administration, which now regulates cigars, has taken the position that “cigar smoking carries many of the same health risks as cigarette smoking.” The agency is requiring cigar packages and ads to display six new warnings, including:

    • Cigar smoking can cause cancers of the mouth and throat, even if you do not inhale.
    • Cigar smoking can cause lung cancer and heart disease.
    • Cigars are not a safe alternative to cigarettes.
    However, an FDA staff report shows that smoking up to two cigars a day is associated with minimal significant health risks.

    Last year, FDA staff, led by Cindy Chang, published in BMC Public Health a systematic review of the risks of cigar smoking, declaring that their action was “not a formal dissemination of information by the FDA and does not represent agency position or policy.”

    The authors reviewed 22 prospective epidemiologic studies on cigars and health outcomes; they produced tables of results for many smoking-related diseases.

    This entry will explore results for deaths from all causes and from cancers among men who are primary cigar smokers (no history of cigarette or pipe smoking). Because the 22 studies employed different methods, and because they controlled or adjusted for various factors, the FDA authors did not provide overall summary risk estimates.

    First, let’s look at mortality for all causes of death among cigar smokers, compared with never smokers. A relative risk, or RR, of 1 is no risk, and an RR confidence interval that includes 1 is not statistically significant.)

    Table 1. Relative Risk Estimates For All-Cause Mortality Among Men Who Smoke Cigars
    Publication, Year Relative Risk (95% Confidence Interval, CI)
    Best, 1966 1.06 (0.92 – 1.22)
    Kahn, 1966 1.10 (1.05 – 1.16)
    Cole, 1974 1.15 (0.70 – 1.90)
    Carstensen, 1987 1.39 (1.16 – 1.65)
    Lange, 1992 1.60 (1.30 – 2.00)
    Ben-Schlomo, 1994 0.48 (0.25 – 0.93)
    Shanks, 1998 1.08 (1.05 – 1.12)
    Table 1 shows that cigar smokers have an elevated risk for death from all causes. With the exception of the Ben-Schlomo study, all of the estimates are elevated, and four are statistically significant. So it appears that there is a modest increase in risk among cigar smokers for all causes of death.

    Next, let’s look at the risks for individual cancers.

    Table 2. Relative Risks For Cancer Mortality Among Men Who Smoke Cigars
    Cancer Site Relative Risk Range No. of Studies / No. of Significant Elevated Estimates
    Mouth/throat 4.0 – 7.9 3 / 3
    Esophagus 1.8 – 6.5 4 / 2
    Stomach 1.2 – 2.3 2 / 1
    Liver 3.1 – 7.2 2 / 2
    Pancreas 1.0 – 1.6 4 / 1
    Larynx 10.0 – 10.3 3 / 3
    Lung 1.6 – 7.6 6 / 5
    Bladder 0.9 – 1.9 4 / 0
    It appears that, like cigarette smokers, cigar smokers have elevated cancer risks, especially at places in contact with smoke, such as the mouth/throat, esophagus, larynx and lung. For other sites, like the stomach, pancreas and bladder, elevated risks are minimal and/or based on very limited data.

    In other research published by the FDA, primary cigar smokers consumed on average about one and a half cigars per day when they smoked. This is relevant to a key epidemiology principle: the level of risk is related to the level of exposure. Several studies in the Chang review reported results for smoking one or two cigars per day. Here are those results:

    Table 3. Relative Risks (95% CI) for Mortality Among Men Smoking 1 or 2 Cigars Per Day
    Shanks, 1998 Shapiro, 2000 Other Studies
    All Causes 1.02 (0.97 – 1.07) 1.04 (0.98 – 1.11)1
    Cancer
    Mouth/throat 2.12 (0.43 – 6.18) 0 (0.00 – 0.00)
    Esophagus 2.28 (0.74 – 5.33) 1.80 (0.60 – 5.00)
    Stomach 1.68 (0.95 – 2.97) 2
    Pancreas 1.18 (0.69 – 1.89) 0.60 (0.30 – 1.40)
    Larynx 6.45 (0.72 – 23.3) 6.00 (0.70 – 53.5)
    Lung 0.90 (0.54 – 1.66) 1.30 (0.70 – 2.40) 1.14 (0.59 – 2.00)1
    Bladder 0.78 (0.29 – 1.71) 0 (0.00 – 0.00)
    1Kahn 1966, 5 cigars per day or fewer.

    2Chao 2002, 5 cigars per day or fewer.

    While some risk estimates are elevated, none are statistically significant. The highest risks are for larynx cancer, but they are based on only two deaths in Shanks and one death in Shapiro.

    What are the important take-home messages for cigar smokers with respect to risks for all causes of death and for smoking-related cancers? FDA staff concluded that:

    [C]igar smoking carries many of the same health risks as cigarette smoking. Mortality risks from cigar smoking vary by level of exposure as measured by cigars per day and inhalation level [not discussed here] and can be as high as or exceed those of cigarette smoking.

    However, the data indicates that consumption of up to two cigars per day, while not completely safe, is neither associated with significantly increased risks for death from all causes, nor smoking-related cancers.

    In a subsequent post, I will present results for other diseases, including lung and cardiovascular disorders.
     
    A Demir, Montañero, kermit y 7 otros les gusta esto.
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  3. jcp

    jcp Epicur

    Mensajes:
    1.890
    Excelente noticia!.

    Ya saben, los que fuman 3 o 4 a la semana. Pueden subir a 14. Excelente!.
     
    Última modificación: 23 de Agosto de 2019
    A Demir, pikachupeleon, rugge86 y 5 otros les gusta esto.
  4. valmontvanilla

    valmontvanilla Bohemio profesional Miembro del Equipo Moderador

    Mensajes:
    9.490
    Gracias Triple Maduro, muy buen aporte.
     
    A dalcalaso y Triple maduro les gusta esto.
  5. dalcalaso

    dalcalaso Maestro

    Mensajes:
    3.274
    Interesante, Triple Maduro. :)
     
    A Triple maduro y valmontvanilla les gusta esto.
  6. valmontvanilla

    valmontvanilla Bohemio profesional Miembro del Equipo Moderador

    Mensajes:
    9.490
    Ahora sí ya me puedo atascar agusto.
     
    A leandro79 y Triple maduro les gusta esto.
  7. coolgui

    coolgui Maestro

    Mensajes:
    2.676
    Me considero independiente y como tal tomo lo que dice la FDA o cualquier agencia gubernamental de cualquier país con pinzas.
    Dicho esto sigo fumando mi cigarro
    Saludos y buenos humos!
     
    A Montañero, rugge86, Sunchace y 3 otros les gusta esto.
  8. juanodin

    juanodin Maestro

    Mensajes:
    4.585
    Una marca de cigarros encargó un estudio en el que se demostraba que el tabaco tenía componentes beneficiosos para la salud, como anécdota, ningún médico quiso firmarlo ni publicarlo por miedo a represalias
     
  9. Alejo

    Alejo Epicur

    Mensajes:
    1.137
    Gracias por la información.
    Saludos
     
    A valmontvanilla le gusta esto.
  10. rugge86

    rugge86 Prominente

    Mensajes:
    496
    Pues a mi comprarlos me da ardor de estómagos por tener que escuchar a mi mujer luego
     
    A Diego Galán, Montañero, Don Firmin y 6 otros les gusta esto.
  11. Montañero

    Montañero Belicoso

    Mensajes:
    170
    Que levante la mano al que fumarse un purito de vez en cuando no le haga ser un poco más feliz. :-/ ¿Y acaso no está demostrado y admitido por la comunidad médica que la "felicidad" tiene un efecto protector sobre muchas enfermedades, como las que tienen que ver con el sistema inmunológico? Pues eso. ;)
     
    A Demir, Diego Galán, Triple maduro y 2 otros les gusta esto.

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