Trends in smoking-attributable mortality in Spain: 1990–2018

Author:

Rey-Brandariz Julia1,Pérez-Ríos Mónica12,Santiago-Pérez María Isolina3,Galán Iñaki4ORCID,Schiaffino Anna56,Varela-Lema Leonor1,Montes Agustín12,López-Vizcaíno María Esther7,Giraldo-Osorio Alexandra189,Candal-Pedreira Cristina1,Ruano-Ravina Alberto12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Preventive Medicine and Public Health, Universidade de Santiago de Compostela , Santiago de Compostela, Spain

2. Consortium for Biomedical Research in Epidemiology and Public Health (CIBER en Epidemiología y Salud Pública/CIBERESP) , Madrid, Spain

3. Epidemiology Department, Directorate-General of Public Health, Galician Regional Health Authority , Santiago de Compostela, Spain

4. National Centre for Epidemiology, Carlos III Institute of Health , Madrid, Spain

5. Directorate-General of Health Planning, Health Department, Catalonian Regional Authority , Barcelona, Spain

6. Catalonian Institute of Oncology , Barcelona, Spain

7. Galician Statistics Institute , Santiago de Compostela, Spain

8. Department of Public Health, University of Caldas , Manizales, Colombia

9. Carolina Foundation , Madrid, Spain

Abstract

Abstract Background This study sought to analyse the trend in smoking-attributable mortality (SAM) in Spain among the population aged ≥35 years across the period 1990–2018. Methods SAM was estimated by applying a prevalence-independent method, which uses lung cancer (LC) mortality as a proxy of tobacco consumption. We sourced observed mortality from the National Institute of Statistics (Spain), LC mortality rates in smokers and never smokers from the Cancer Prevention Study I–II, and relative risks from 5 US cohorts. Estimates of annual SAM by cause of death, sex and age are shown, along with crude and annual standardised SAM rates. The trend in standardised all-cause and LC rates was analysed using a joinpoint regression model. Results Tobacco caused 1 717 150 deaths in Spain in the period 1990–2018. Among men, cancers replaced cardiovascular diseases–diabetes mellitus (CVD–DM) as the leading group of tobacco-related cause of death in 1994. Among women, CVD–DM remained the leading cause of death throughout the period. Trend analysis of standardised SAM rates due to all causes and LC showed a decrease in men and an increase in women. Conclusions The tobacco epidemic in Spain across the period 1990–2018 has had an important impact on mortality and has evolved differently in both genders. SAM is expected to increase dramatically in women in the coming years. SAM data highlight the importance of including a gender perspective in SAM analyses, in designing more effective and comprehensive public health interventions and in developing gender-specific tobacco control policies to curb tobacco consumption.

Funder

Carlos III Institute of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference36 articles.

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