The study of time trends in cancer incidence and mortality can provide valuable insights into the effect that a disease is having on the population. A model will be developed in which the effect that smoking cigarettes, a well know cause of this disease, has on population based lung cancer rates. Age-period-cohort models have offered one useful way of developing a statistical summary of temporal trends. In this case, age represents the effect of the aging process on a disease risk. Period and cohort, on the other hand, are likely to reflect changes in the exposure to import risk factors or in the surveillance system. While analytical epidemiologic studies offer the best way to estimate the effect of putative risk factors on disease risk, quantitative descriptions of the way in which changes in exposure can affect population rates can be much more challenging. The purpose of this research is to develop a model in which trends in risk factors for lung cancer incidence are used to describe observed trends in incidence and mortality for the disease. These will then be used to estimate the effect on lung cancer mortality of interventions designed to reduce cigarette smoking.
The specific aims of this research are to: ? ? 1. Develop a model for lung cancer incidence trends among SEER registries and determine the extent to which available data on smoking trends can be used as explanatory variables; ? ? 2. Develop a compartment model that describes the relationship between lung cancer incidence and mortality using available data from SEER registries; ? ? 3. Develop a model that uses available state information on cigarette smoking trends to explain the variation in cancer mortality trends among contiguous states; and, ? ? 4. Use the model developed in aims1-3 to estimate the population effect of various anti-smoking campaign strategies on future lung cancer mortality trends.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Project--Cooperative Agreements (U01)
Project #
5U01CA097432-03
Application #
6799291
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZCA1-SRRB-D (M1))
Program Officer
Feuer, Eric J
Project Start
2002-08-15
Project End
2005-07-31
Budget Start
2004-08-18
Budget End
2005-07-31
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2004
Total Cost
$147,938
Indirect Cost
Name
Yale University
Department
Public Health & Prev Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
043207562
City
New Haven
State
CT
Country
United States
Zip Code
06520
Holford, Theodore R; Levy, David T; McKay, Lisa A et al. (2014) Patterns of birth cohort-specific smoking histories, 1965-2009. Am J Prev Med 46:e31-7
Moolgavkar, Suresh H; Holford, Theodore R; Levy, David T et al. (2012) Impact of reduced tobacco smoking on lung cancer mortality in the United States during 1975-2000. J Natl Cancer Inst 104:541-8
Holford, Theodore R; Levy, David T (2012) Chapter 14: Comparing the adequacy of carcinogenesis models in estimating U.S. population rates for lung cancer mortality. Risk Anal 32 Suppl 1:S179-89
Holford, Theodore R; Clark, Lauren (2012) Chapter 4: Development of the counterfactual smoking histories used to assess the effects of tobacco control. Risk Anal 32 Suppl 1:S39-50
Feuer, Eric J; Levy, David T; McCarthy, William J (2012) Chapter 1:The impact of the reduction in tobacco smoking on U.S. lung cancer mortality, 1975-2000: an introduction to the problem. Risk Anal 32 Suppl 1:S6-S13
Holford, Theodore R; Ebisu, Keita; McKay, Lisa et al. (2012) Chapter 12: Yale lung cancer model. Risk Anal 32 Suppl 1:S151-65
Holford, Theodore R (2006) Approaches to fitting age-period-cohort models with unequal intervals. Stat Med 25:977-93