ASSOCIATION OF CIGARETTE SMOKING AND RISK OF URINARY BLADDER CANCER: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW

Authors

  • Bayu Kusumo Faculty of Medicine, Indonesian Islamic University, Indonesia Author
  • Inannami Fadiyah Mahrunnisa Faculty of Medicine, Indonesian Islamic University, Indonesia Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.61841/ksa77v64

Keywords:

Cigarette, urinary bladder cancer, risk

Abstract

Background: It has been proposed that smoking cigarettes increases the likelihood of urinary bladder cancer (UBCa). But not everyone who smokes heavily gets these illnesses, and first-degree relatives' higher cancer risk points to a significant hereditary component.

Aims: This systematic review is to review the association between cigarette smoking and its risk of urinary bladder cancer in men and women.

Methods: This study demonstrated compliance with all requirements by means of a comparison with the standards established by the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA) 2020. Thus, the specialists were able to guarantee that the research was as current as feasible. Publications released between 2014 and 2024 were considered for this search strategy. This was accomplished by utilizing a number of distinct online reference sites, including Pubmed, ScienceDirect, and SagePub. It was determined that reviews, previously published works, and partially completed works would not be included.

Result: In the PubMed database, the results of our search brought up 729 articles, whereas the results of our search on SAGEPUB brought up 1495 articles, our search on SCIENCE DIRECT brought up 11284 articles. The results of the search conducted for the last year of 2014 yielded a total 177 articles for PubMed, 442 articles for SAGEPUB and 3775 articles for SCIENCE DIRECT. In the end, we compiled a total of 8 papers, 5 of which came from PubMed, 1 of which came from SAGEPUB and 2 of which came from SCIENCE DIRECT. We included eight research that met the criteria.

Conclusion: In summary, tobacco smoking was a strong risk factor for bladder cancer for both men and women.

References

Freedman ND, Silverman DT, Hollenbeck AR, Schatzkin A, Abnet CC. Association between smoking and risk of bladder cancer among men and women. JAMA. 2011 Aug 17;306(7):737–45.

Kamal NN, Mahmoud AAEA, Khalifa MAZ, Mohammed KH, Hassan EE. Association between smoking and urinary bladder cancer (BC): case control study in Minia, Egypt. Minia Journal of Medical Research. 2023;

Knapp DW, Dhawan D, Ruple A, Cooper BR, Zhang M, Liu D, et al. Association between cigarette smoke exposure and urinary bladder cancer in Scottish terriers in a cohort study. Veterinary Journal. 2024 Feb 1;303.

Jimenez IB, Richardot P, Picard P, Lepicard EM, Meo MD, Talaska G. Effect of Increased Water Intake on Urinary DNA Adduct Levels and Mutagenicity in Smokers: A Randomized Study. Dis Markers. 2015;

Boeri L, Soligo M, Frank I, Boorjian SA, Thompson RH, Tollefson M. Cigarette smoking is associated with adverse pathological response and increased disease recurrence amongst patients with muscle-invasive bladder cancer treated with cisplatin-based neoadjuvant chemotherapy and radical cystectomy: a single-centre experience. BJU Int. 2019;123(6):1011–9.

Kwan ML, Haque R, Young-Wolff KC, Lee VS, Roh JM, Ergas IJ, et al. Smoking Behaviors and Prognosis in Patients With Non-Muscle-Invasive Bladder Cancer in the Be-Well Study. JAMA Netw Open. 2022;5(11).

Gild P, Vetterlein MW, Seiler R, Necchi A, Hendricksen K, Mertens LS. The association of cigarette smoking and pathological response to neoadjuvant platinum-based chemotherapy in patients undergoing treatment for urinary bladder cancer - A prospective European multicenter observational study of the EAU Young Academic Urologists (YAU) urothelial carcinoma working group. Surg Oncol. 2020;34:312–7.

Lewin NL, Karlsson JE, Robinsson D, Fagerberg M, Kentsson M. Influence of single nucleotide polymorphisms among cigarette smoking and non-smoking patients with coronary artery disease, urinary bladder cancer and lung cancer. PLoS One. 2021;16(1).

Xiong j, Yang L, Deng YQ, Yan SY, Gu JM. The causal association between smoking, alcohol consumption and risk of bladder cancer: A univariable and multivariable Mendelian randomization study. Int J Cancer. 2022;151(12):2136–43.

Catto JWF, Rogers Z, Downing A, Mason SJ, Jubber I, Bottomley S, et al. Lifestyle Factors in Patients with Bladder Cancer: A Contemporary Picture of Tobacco Smoking, Electronic Cigarette Use, Body Mass Index, and Levels of Physical Activity. Eur Urol Focus. 2023 Nov 1;9(6):974–82.

Downloads

Published

2024-03-22

How to Cite

Kusumo, B., & Mahrunnisa , I. F. (2024). ASSOCIATION OF CIGARETTE SMOKING AND RISK OF URINARY BLADDER CANCER: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW. Journal of Advanced Research in Medical and Health Science (ISSN 2208-2425), 10(3), 263-270. https://doi.org/10.61841/ksa77v64

Similar Articles

31-40 of 211

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.