Epidemiologic case-study and cohort-study data concerning effects of estrogen replacement therapy on the risk of cardiovascular disease in postmenopausal women are reviewed. Although there is conflicting literature, most research strongly suggests that estrogens, and estrogen replacement therapy in particular, reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease. Such reduced risk in estrogen users is most likely mediated in part by the beneficial effects of estrogen therapy on lipid metabolism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe authors studied 1,342 cases of adenocarcinoma of the stomach identified by a population-based cancer registry in Los Angeles County, California. The cases were males aged 20-64 years first diagnosed between 1972 and 1982. To determine whether exposure to occupational dust increased the risk of developing stomach cancer, occupational titles were rated for the likelihood of exposure to various kinds of dust.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInformation on occupation, smoking, food and beverage consumption, and medical history were compared between 275 incident cases of carcinoma of the esophagus and 275 neighborhood controls who were matched to the cases on age (within 5 years), race, and sex. Tobacco use, mainly cigarette smoking, was a significant risk factor for carcinoma of the esophagus. Ex-smokers of cigarettes showed a reduced risk relative to those who continued to smoke, and current smokers of two or more packs per day displayed a higher risk than those who smoked less.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn estrogen-progestogen regimen of hormone replacement therapy has become widely used in recent years, primarily as a means to protect the endometrium from the carcinogenic effects of unopposed estrogen therapy (ERT). In this article, we evaluate the probable effects of this regimen on mortality from endometrial cancer as well as mortality from other chronic diseases. We conclude from this analysis that ERT is to be preferred to combination therapy for postmenopausal women without a uterus, primarily because it is predicted that ERT confers a significantly greater benefit on heart disease risk.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effects of aldicarb on soybean cyst (Heterodera glycines) and root-knot (Meloidogyne incognita and M. arenaria) nematode populations, early season insect pests and soybean (Glycine max) yield were evaluated in five field experiments in northern and southern Alabama. Aldicarb significantly (P = 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Natl Cancer Inst
February 1987
With the use of age-adjusted incidence rates and proportional incidence ratios, investigators studied the risk of cancer of the stomach and 3 subdivisions of the large bowel in three race-ethnic groups--Spanish surnamed whites, other whites, and Japanese--and compared Los Angeles County native residents, immigrants, and representative "homeland" populations. The risk pattern for each of the four anatomic sites was quite distinctive, suggesting at least four different etiologic complexes. For each site the observed gradients of risk are nearly identical for each sex, usually with risk for immigrants intermediary between that for homeland residents and that for local natives; the differences between race-ethnic groups are consistent with known international patterns.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Natl Cancer Inst
November 1986
A case-control study among white women in Los Angeles County was conducted to investigate etiologic factors that might explain the high rates of invasive cervical cancer among Latinas. Two hundred patients with invasive squamous cell carcinoma of the uterine cervix and matched (age, sex, preferred language, and neighborhood) controls were interviewed, 98 pairs in English and 102 pairs in Spanish. Seven factors were found to contribute independently and significantly (P less than .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOne hundred sixty incident cases of renal cell carcinoma under the age of 55 years and an equal number of age-(within 5 yr), race-, and sex-matched neighborhood controls were interviewed. Cigarette smoking was a risk factor for renal cell carcinoma in males [relative risk (RR) = 2.1, one-sided P = .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe histology pattern of lung cancer in Los Angeles County was reviewed for a 10-year period, 1972-81. In men, the total lung cancer incidence has been fairly constant, but there has been a shift in the histology pattern with an increase in adenocarcinoma and a decrease in "other" cell type (i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn general, epidemiologic data from case-control and cohort studies have suggested that postmenopausal estrogen use confers a moderate degree of protection from coronary artery disease. The authors report reductions in all-cause mortality rates and in mortality rates for acute myocardial infarction among estrogen replacement users in comparison with never-users. It is calculated that even a small decline in the mortality rate for coronary artery disease among estrogen users would have a major impact on the overall risk/benefit ratio associated with estrogen use.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBy hypothesizing that oral contraceptives (OC's) might have a carcinogenic effect on glandular cells of the cervix if given during periods of active metaplasia (e.g., postmenarchal adolescence), an increasing rate of cervical adenocarcinoma was predicted in young women who had been teenagers when OC's were introduced roughly 20 years ago.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Natl Cancer Inst
January 1986
Four hundred and ninety pancreas cancer patients representative of confirmed cases in Los Angeles County residents of working age were compared to healthy controls individually matched by age, sex, race, and neighborhood. Home interviews were conducted on occupation, smoking, food and beverage consumption, and medical history. Cigarette smoking was a strong and consistent predictor of pancreas cancer occurrence; the effect disappeared after a decade of nonsmoking, and there was no increase in risk among current smokers as daily dose increased.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe demographic characteristics of "classic" Kaposi's sarcoma (KS) and of "epidemic" KS in Los Angeles, CA, were compared with the use of data from the Cancer Surveillance Program, the population-based tumor registry in Los Angeles County. The data obtained document the magnitude of the excess risk of classic KS for Jewish men of European (especially Eastern and Southern European) origin. The data also show in a systematic way the magnitude of the increase in acquired immune deficiency syndrome-related KS in one large urban area of the United States.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUsing ethnicity of surname, nativity, residential social class, and inferred age at migration to characterize and subdivide Hispanics in Los Angeles, we compared risk ratios and proportional incidence ratios to examine the patterns of occurrence of selected neoplasms within the Hispanic community. Common neoplasms for which Hispanics have high, low, and intermediary risk were examined in detail. Although the patterns expected on the basis of current concepts of etiology were generally found and served to reinforce presumptions about the biologic significance of the risk factors, a number of observations cannot be explained easily with current knowledge.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe patterns of cancer risk by religion in the large multidenominational population of Los Angeles County were examined with the method of proportional incidence. Risk estimates for individual cancers by religion were screened and those extreme but stable estimates found were reexamined in light of relative socioeconomic class, nativity, and ethnicity. Within Protestant denominations, gradients which can still best be attributed to religious preference were observed for leukemia, stomach, and cervix cancer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNatl Cancer Inst Monogr
December 1985
Five approaches for the evaluation of occupational factors in cancer etiology are described. These approaches, based on one's having access to cancer registry data, are for examining cancer profiles for industry and occupation, evaluating information on occupation and industry to infer exposure, observing time trends in incidence to evaluate tumors of occupational interest, using cases of interest to form the basis for case-control studies, and linking cohorts with known exposure to the tumor registry to ascertain cancer incidence in that cohort.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFrom 1975 to 1981, 490 cases of exocrine adenocarcinoma of the pancreas, representative of those occurring in the working-age population of Los Angeles County, were compared to matched neighborhood controls. Among the items of information obtained from each subject was a lifetime job history and a history of specific workplace exposures; this came directly from both case and control in 124 pairs. Although the matched cases and controls were generally comparable, they were not matched with respect to job history.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe authors studied 2,950 population-based colon cancer cases in males in Los Angeles County, California, that were diagnosed between 1972 and 1981. To determine if colon cancer risk is reduced by physical activity on the job in males aged 20-64 years, the authors first rated each occupation by judging the activity level as high, moderate, or sedentary. Men with sedentary jobs had a colon cancer risk at least 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCharacteristics of Los Angeles, Calif., residents in whom carcinomas of the cervix, vulva, vagina, anus, and penis were diagnosed during the period 1972-81 were compared with those of all residents and with those in whom any cancer was diagnosed during the same period. At all five sites, risks for squamous and transitional cell carcinomas generally increased with decreasing social class, were low among Jews (not explained by social class), and were elevated among persons who were separated or divorced at diagnosis compared to married persons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeventy-eight black patients and white patients with primary hepatocellular carcinoma (PHC), 70 years or younger at diagnosis, and 78 age-, sex-, and race-matched neighborhood controls were interviewed. Information sought included usual dietary and drinking habits, cigarette smoking habits, prior medical conditions including a history of hepatitis, prior exposure to blood products, and occupational history. Cigarette smoking was a risk factor for PHC; the relative risk (RR) for current smokers of more than one pack/day compared to nonsmokers was 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBr J Cancer
November 1983
Marital status and other characteristics of 970 residents of Los Angeles County in whom cancer of the anus (including perianal skin) was diagnosed during the period 1972-1981 were compared with those of all county residents and all other persons in whom cancer was diagnosed during the same period. The incidence rate of anal cancer for single males was 6.1 times that for married males (P less than 0.
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