BEIJING, July 2 (Xinhuanet) -- Smokeless tobacco -- such as chewing
tobacco and snuff -- are less dangerous than cigarettes but still raise the
risk of oral cancer by 80 percent, according to the World Health
Organization's cancer agency.
A review of 11 studies worldwide showed people who chewed tobacco and used
snuff also had a 60 percent higher risk of esophagus and pancreatic cancer.
The researchers sought to quantify the risk of smokeless tobacco after a
number of studies differed on just how dangerous the products were, said
Paolo Boffetta, an epidemiologist at the WHO's International Agency for
Research on Cancer.
"What we did was try to quantify the burden of smokeless cancer," he said in
a telephone interview. "This has never been attempted in such a systematic
way before."
The researchers, who published their findings in Lancet Oncology, did this
by looking at population-wide studies and trials of both humans and animals.
They found frequency of use varies greatly both across and within countries,
depending on sex, age, ethnic origin and economic background, and were
highest in the United States, Sweden and India.
They also found that while snuff and chew were less dangerous than smoking
because they were not linked to lung cancer, getting cigarette users to
switch was not good public policy.
"If all smokers did this there would be a net benefit," Boffetta said. "The
point is we don't know whether this would happen and there is no data to
suggest these smokers would stop or switch."