In Cities, Reducing Air Pollution Could Lower Cancer Rates At Similar Rates As Eliminating Smoking

“Places with high levels of air pollution would still have higher cancer rates even if smoking was eliminated.”

Smoke from factory can be seen in background, cars on the road in the foreground

(Photo by Jacek Dylag / Unsplash)

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This article was originally published on Environmental Health News.

Exposure to air pollution has a significant impact on rates of cancers typically associated with smoking, according to a recent study.

The study, published in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, found that in polluted urban areas, reducing air pollution could do as much as completely eliminating smoking would to lower rates of the 12 types of cancer most commonly associated with smoking, including lung cancer, stomach cancer, kidney cancer, bladder cancer, pancreatic cancer, liver cancer, cervical cancer, oral cancer, colon cancer, esophageal cancer, cancer of the larynx and acute myeloid leukemia.

“Getting people to quit smoking is a really important way to prevent cancer, but we found that it’s not going to do as much in places that are highly polluted,” David Kriebel, a professor and director of the Lowell Center for Sustainable Production at the University of Massachusetts and one of the study’s authors, tells Environmental Health News (EHN).

The study builds on previous research by the same authors that estimated how much cancer rates would have declined in counties across the U.S. if everyone had quit smoking 20 years ago. That study found that in many urban counties with high levels of air pollution, lung cancer rates would not be significantly lower if everyone had quit smoking.

For example, in Allegheny County, which encompasses Pittsburgh — a region with some of the worst air quality in the country — lung cancer rates would only have dropped by 11% if everyone had quit smoking 20 years ago. For comparison, the average cancer reduction for all 612 counties included in the study was 62% if everyone had quit smoking 20 years ago — suggesting that there is something else driving cancer rates in places like Allegheny County.

“We hypothesized that air pollution was playing a role,” Doug Myers, a professor at Boise State University and another of the study’s authors, tells EHN. “We tested that in this new study and confirmed that places with high levels of air pollution would still have higher cancer rates even if smoking was eliminated.”

“Air pollution was the primary driver”

The study measured air pollution by looking at Air Quality Index data, which measures four major air pollutants regulated by the federal Clean Air Act — ground level ozone, particle pollution, carbon monoxide and sulfur dioxide — along with other hazardous air pollutants, including carcinogens like chloroprene, formaldehyde, and vinyl chloride.

The researchers found that the higher the Air Quality Index was in a county, the more likely it was that eliminating smoking would make little difference in rates of the types of cancer associated with smoking.

“We also looked at some other factors, like land and water pollution, the built environment and sociodemographic factors,” Myers explains. “We found air pollution was the primary driver of counties where cancer rates would remain high even if everyone quit smoking.”

Addressing air pollution

Next, the researchers hope to investigate the effects of specific air pollutants and look at their effects on rates of individual types of cancer. It can take 20 years or more for cancer to develop following a harmful exposure, so one challenge is finding pollution data that goes back far enough.

“That makes it challenging to study the effects of something like fracking on cancer risk, for example,” Kriebel says. “It’s just too early — we don’t yet have 20 years of exposure data on a big enough population.”

In the meantime, the researchers hope public health departments across the U.S. will use their findings to allocate additional cancer-prevention resources to lowering air pollution.

“Tobacco control is critical, but if you only talk about personal behaviors when you talk about cancer risk, it can sound like you’re blaming people,” Kriebel says. “In polluted places like Pittsburgh, it’s more effective public health messaging to also acknowledge that there are risk factors that are beyond people’s control, like air pollution, and show that you’re working on addressing those, too.”

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Kristina Marusic covers environmental health and justice issues in Pittsburgh and Western Pennsylvania. Her new book, “A New War On Cancer: The Unlikely Heroes Revolutionizing Prevention” (May 2023) uncovers an emerging national movement to prevent cancer by reducing our exposure to cancer-causing chemicals in our everyday lives. Kristina has covered issues related to environmental and social justice for a wide range of digital media outlets including Slate, Vice, Women's Health, MTV News, The Advocate, CNN, and Bustle. She is also the co-president and co-founder of the Pittsburgh chapter of the Association of LGBTQ Journalists. She lives in Pittsburgh.

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Tags: pollution

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