Population attributable fractions of modifiable cancer risk factors in Korea: A systematic review

Author:

Han Mi Ah1ORCID,Kim Seo‐Hee12,Hwang Eu Chang3,Jung Jae Hung45,Park Sun Mi1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Preventive Medicine College of Medicine Chosun University Gwangju The Republic of Korea

2. Department of Public Health Graduate School Chosun University Gwangju The Republic of Korea

3. Department of Urology Chonnam National University Medical School Chonnam National University Hwasun Hospital Hwasun The Republic of Korea

4. Department of Urology Yonsei University Wonju College of Medicine Wonju The Republic of Korea

5. Center of Evidence Based Medicine Institute of Convergence Science Yonsei University Seoul The Republic of Korea

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesThe population attributable fraction (PAF), an epidemiologic measure of exposures and health outcomes, can provide information on the public health impacts of exposures in populations. This study aimed to systematically summarize the PAF estimates of modifiable cancer risk factors in Korea.MethodsThis review included studies that determined PAFs of modifiable risk factors for cancer in Korea. We performed systematic searches in EMBASE, MEDLINE, Cochrane library, and Korean databases for studies published up to July 2021. Two reviewers independently screened studies for eligibility, extracted data, and performed quality assessments of the included studies. Due to high variability among the data acquisition methods and PAF estimates, we presented the results qualitatively and did not perform quantitative data synthesis.ResultsWe reviewed 16 studies that reported the PAFs of risk factors for cancer, including smoking, alcohol consumption, obesity, and various cancer sites. We found considerable variability in the PAF estimates across exposure and cancer pairs. However, PAF estimates for smoking and respiratory cancer were consistently high in men. PAF estimates were higher in men than in women for smoking and alcohol consumption but higher in women for obesity. We found limited evidence for other exposures and cancers.ConclusionOur findings may be used to prioritize and plan strategies to reduce cancer burden. We encourage further and updated assessments of cancer risk factors, including those not addressed in the studies included in this review, and their potential contributions to cancer burden to better inform strategies for cancer control.

Funder

Ministry of Education

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Oncology,General Medicine

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