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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2004
June
Study finds no link
between marijuana use and oral cancer
Melissa
Mitchell, News Editor
217-333-5491; melissa@uiuc.edu
6/8/04
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| Photo
by Bill Wiegand |
| Karin
Rosenblatt, a cancer epidemiologist and professor
of
community health at Illinois, was the lead researcher
on a project that explored whether marijuana use increased
risk for oral cancer. The research found no link between
marijuana use and risk of developing oral squamous
cell carcinoma (OSCC). |
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CHAMPAIGN,
Ill. — Oral cancer probably hasn’t been high on the average
pot smoker’s list of concerns – despite the fact that marijuana
smoke contains known carcinogens. It may be even less of a concern now
in light of new research that found no link between marijuana use and
risk of developing oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC).
The research results, which diverge significantly from those of previous
investigations, were based on a large, population-based case-control
study conducted by collaborating researchers from the University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Seattle’s Fred Hutchinson Cancer
Research Center and Center for Health Studies, Group Health Cooperative.
Their findings – the most comprehensive to date regarding possible
connections between marijuana use and OSCC – were reported in
the June issue of Cancer Research, a publication of the American Association
for Cancer Research.
“We did not see an increase in risk for oral cancer in people
who had ever smoked marijuana after controlling for other risk factors,
such as tobacco smoking and alcohol consumption,” said Karin Rosenblatt,
a cancer epidemiologist and professor of community
health at Illinois. Rosenblatt, a lead researcher on the project,
noted that the study’s findings were consistent, regardless of
variable patterns of marijuana use, including how much individuals smoked,
how often and for how long.
“When asking whether any marijuana use puts you at increased risk
of oral cancer, our study is pretty solid in saying there’s nothing
going on there,” said Stephen M. Schwartz, the study’s senior
author. Schwartz is a member of Fred Hutchinson’s Public Health
Sciences Division and a professor of epidemiology at the University
of Washington.
The study results run counter to those found in previous investigations,
including case reports and a widely publicized hospital-based case-control
study, issued in 1999, which suggested marijuana users’ chances
of developing head-and-neck squamous-cell carcinoma were more than twice
that of non-users.
“The main problem (with that study) was that the control group
was blood donors,” Rosenblatt said. Such individuals aren’t
typically representative of the population at large, she said, because
“they are screened for HIV and tend not to have certain drug or
sexual habits that put them at greater risk for contracting infectious
diseases.”
The size of the new study’s data pool – three times that
of the 1999 study – also makes it more statistically viable. Additional
attributes include the collection of more detailed data about participants’
marijuana use, and inclusion of a greater number of subjects who reported
using the drug for five or more years.
As epidemiologists – public-health professionals interested in
the cause and distribution of diseases among populations – the
study’s authors said a number of factors motivated them to pursue
a broader investigation of possible links between marijuana use and
oral cancer. Among them, they cited a general concern that “marijuana
is the most commonly used illegal drug in the United States, and new
users increased among minors during the 1990s.”
Further concerns included indications from experimental studies that
“components of marijuana smoke are mutagenic in bacteria and cause
molecular and cellular changes in bronchial tissue comparable to those
seen among tobacco smokers and consistent with early steps in cancer
development.”
The new study, funded by the National Institutes of Health’s National
Cancer Institute and National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research,
focused on marijuana-use histories and other lifestyle habits of 407
oral-cancer cases and 615 healthy control subjects from western Washington.
Research subjects included males and females aged 18 to 65.
The oral-cancer cases were drawn from a registry, based at Fred Hutchinson,
which is part of the National Cancer Institute’s Surveillance,
Epidemiology and End Results program. General-population participants
were selected through random-digit telephone dialing.
Similar marijuana-use patterns were found among both groups studied
– 25.6 percent of case subjects and 24.4 percent of control subjects
reported ever using marijuana or hashish. Most reported using it less
than once a week, with 2 percent or less reporting daily use. Six percent
of case subjects and 4 percent of controls had smoked marijuana or hashish
for 15 years or more.
In addition to analyzing and comparing data obtained through in-person
interviews, the researchers analyzed publicly available data from the
National Household Survey of Drug Abuse, collected over several years,
and obtained biological specimens from participants.
Through analysis of the biological specimens, Rosenblatt and her colleagues
further determined that marijuana users with defective GST (gluthathione
S-transferase) genes were not exposed to greater risks for oral cancer
than counterparts with normal GST genes. GST genes, Rosenblatt noted,
produce enzymes that aid in the body’s detoxification process.
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