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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: snus + linked + use  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)


Richmond.com
In Pursuit of the Golden Leaf
Richmond.com, VA - Jul 7, 2008
PM spokesmen say the R&D facility is looking into the use of smokeless tobacco such as snus, but an investigation of patents and recruitment ads indicates ...
OncoGenex receives completed Special Protocol Assessment for ...
Canada NewsWire (press release), Canada - Jul 14, 2008
Definitive Agreement to Merge On May 28, 2008, Sonus Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ: SNUS) and OncoGenex Technologies Inc., jointly announced the signing of ...SNUS
Source: Google News

Oral use of Swedish moist snuff (snus) and risk for cancer of the mouth, lung, and pancreas in male … -
J Luo, W Ye, K Zendehdel, J Adami, HO Adami, P … - The Lancet, 2007 - Elsevier
... we fitted models in which the relative risks associated with smoking were adjusted
for snus use, and in which relative risks linked to snus use were adjusted ...

Role of snus (oral moist snuff) in smoking cessation and smoking reduction in Sweden. -
H Gilljam, MR Galanti - Addiction, 2003 - pt.wkhealth.com
... The present study explores another aspect of the complex patterns of tobacco use
in Sweden, namely whether the use of snus among smokers is linked to the ...

Effect of smokeless tobacco (snus) on smoking and public health in Sweden -
J Foulds, L Ramstrom, M Burke, K Fagerstrom - British Medical Journal, 2003 - tobaccocontrol.bmj.com
... young people had not yet established a stable profile of tobacco use, and that tobacco
use, and particularly combined smoking and snus use, was linked with a ...

Should the European Union lift the ban on snus? Evidence from the Swedish experience -
KO Fagerstrom, EB Schildt - Addiction, 2003 - Blackwell Synergy
... moist snuff, has been reported to be linked with considerable ... 15% of Swedish males
were using ?snus? (the Swedish ... Since then the use of snus in Sweden has ...

Smokeless tobacco use and risk of cancer of the pancreas and other organs -
P Boffetta, B Aagnes, E Weiderpass, A Andersen - International Journal of Cancer, 2005 - doi.wiley.com
... cause other cancers, in particular those linked to tobacco ... cancers entailed by smokeless
tobacco use is needed ... 12 Snus is a smokeless tobacco product widely ...

Smokeless tobacco and oral cancer -
S Warnakulasuriya - Oral Diseases, 2004 - Blackwell Synergy
... oral cancer incidence rates in different regions of Saudi Arabia and this is linked
to the ... Around 20% of the male population in Sweden use snus on a daily basis ...

Adolescent snus use in Finland in 1981-2003: trend, total sales ban and acquisition -
HSA Huhtala, SU Rainio, AH Rimpela - British Medical Journal, 2006 - tobaccocontrol.bmj.com
... Two factors working in favour of snus use before the sales ban need attention, namely
snus use among athletes and the health hazards linked with passive smoking ...

Health Risks of Smoking Compared to Swedish Snus -
HD Roth, AB Roth, X Liu - Inhalation Toxicology, 2005 - ingentaconnect.com
... Snus use is less common among women: In 2002, 20% of adult Swedish womensmokedand4%
ofadultSwedishwomenusedsnus.Dur- ing the past 25 yrs, snus use increased ...

Smoking mothers and snuffing fathers: behavioural influences on youth tobacco use in a Swedish … -
KI Rosendahl, MR Galanti, H Gilljam, A Ahlbom - British Medical Journal, 2003 - tobaccocontrol.bmj.com
... in a setting where smokeless tobacco (snus) is gaining ... of parental smoking and ST
use on offspring ... Parental smoking is undoubtedly linked to the corresponding ...

Would alternate tobacco products use be better than smoking? -
Y Martinet, A Bohadana, K Fagerstr?m - Lung Cancer, 2006 - Elsevier
... than cigarettes [6]), its prevalence of use must be ... smokeless tobacco in general,
and its particular form snus. ... harmful than smoking, it is linked to lesions ...

Source: Google Scholar
 

Use of Swedish 'snus' is linked to a doubled risk of pancreatic cancer

People who use Swedish moist snuff (snus) run twice the risk of developing cancer of the pancreas. This is the main result of a follow-up study conducted by Karolinska Institutet researchers amongst almost 300,000 male construction workers. The study is published today online in the prestigious medical journal The Lancet.

Tobacco smoking is a known risk factor for pancreatic cancer, which is an unusually malignant form of the disease. Since it is common for people who take snus – a tobacco product designed for insertion between the gum and upper lip – to also smoke cigarettes, the challenge facing epidemiological research into snus and cancer has been to isolate the effects of the different kinds of tobacco. What makes this new study unique is that it has been possible to study the correlation between snus and cancer risk in a large enough group of men who have never smoked.

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

The subjects attended health check ups between 1978 and 1992, during which they were asked to report on their smoking and ’snusing’ habits. The researchers have also studied rates of oral and lung cancer amongst the men, but found no correlation to snus.

"We’re actually not that surprised," says project leader Professor Olof Nyrén of the Department of Medical Epidemiology and Biostatistics. "Pancreatic cancer has been under discussion in several earlier epidemiological studies on humans, both regarding Scandinavian snus and American smoke-free tobacco. On the other hand, previous studies of oral and lung cancer in relation to Scandinavian snus have been negative."

The main contribution of the new study is its conclusion that Swedish moist snus can be carcinogenic. However, the study also shows that the risks for users are small, and, as far as can be judged, much smaller than the risks associated with smoking.

"If 10,000 non-smoking snus users are monitored for ten years, according to our data, eight or nine of them will develop pancreatic cancer, as opposed to four amongst those who use neither product. But 9,991 won’t, so the odds aren’t that bad," he says.

The debate on whether the net effect of snus is positive or negative has been raging for many years. Some scientists and health carers have advocated the use of snus, as it is likely to lead to that people will smoke less. However, Professor Nyrén argues that it is important to have all the facts on the table before any advice can be given about snus as a way to cut down on smoking.

"We don’t only need reliable and accurate measures of the risks of both smoking and taking snus, we also need know the effects of other, alternative methods to cut smoking. We also have to be certain that an increase in snus marketing will not cause addictions in young people who otherwise wouldn’t have started to smoke," he says.

###

Karolinska Institutet is one of the leading medical universities in Europe. Through research, education and information, Karolinska Institutet contributes to improving human health. Each year, the Nobel Assembly at Karolinska Institutet awards the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. For more information, visit ki.se

Publication:

"Oral use of Swedish moist snuff (snus) and risk for cancer of the mouth, lung and pancreas in male construction workers; a retrospective cohort study"

Juhua Luo, Weimin Ye, Kazem Zendehdel, Johanna Adami, Hans-Olov Adami, Paolo Boffetto, Olof Nyrén

The Lancet, online, 10 May 2007

For further information, please contact:

Professor Olof Nyrén
Tel: +46 (0)8-524 861 95 or +46 (0)70-7428020 (mobile)
Email: olof.nyrén@ki.se

 
Detailed Guide: Pancreatic Cancer

What Is Cancer of the Pancreas?

The Normal Pancreas

The pancreas is a gland located behind the stomach. It is shaped a little bit like a fish with a wide head, a tapering body, and a narrow-pointed tail. It is about 6 inches long but less than 2 inches wide and extends horizontally across the abdomen. The head of the pancreas is located on the right side of the abdomen, behind the place where the stomach meets the duodenum (the first part of the small intestine). The body of the pancreas is located behind the stomach and the tail of the pancreas is on the left side of the abdomen next to the spleen.

The pancreas contains 2 separate glands: the exocrine and endocrine glands. The exocrine gland produces pancreatic “juice,” which contains enzymes that help you digest fats, proteins, and carbohydrates in the food you eat. Without these, some of the food you eat would just pass through your intestinal tract -- sometimes leading to diarrhea. The enzymes are released into tiny tubes called ducts. These ducts carry the pancreatic juice to the small intestine. More than 95% of the cells in the pancreas are exocrine glands and ducts.

A small percentage of the cells in the pancreas are endocrine cells. These cells are arranged in small clusters called islets (or islets of Langerhans). The islets release 2 hormones, insulin and glucagon. Insulin is important in reducing the amount of sugar in the blood while glucagon increases it. Diabetes results from a defect in insulin production.

Types of Tumors of the Pancreas

The exocrine cells and endocrine cells of the pancreas form completely different types of tumors.

Exocrine tumors:This is far and away the most common type of pancreas cancer. Although benign cysts and benign tumors call cystadenomas can occur, most pancreatic tumor are malignant. About 95% of cancers of the exocrine pancreas are adenocarcinomas. Adenocarcinomas usually begin in the ducts of the pancreas but sometimes develop from the cells that actually produce the pancreatic enzymes (acinar cell carcinomas). Less common types of ductal cancers of the exocrine pancreas include adenosquamous carcinomas, squamous cell carcinomas, and giant cell carcinomas. These types are distinguished from one another based on their appearance under the microscope. About two thirds of these cancers are found in the head of the pancreas, the rest in the tail. Treatment of an exocrine pancreatic cancer is mostly based on the stage of the cancer, not its exact type. (Pancreatic cancer staging is described later in this document.)


A special type of cancer, called ampullary cancer or carcinoma of the ampulla of Vater, can develop where the bile duct and pancreatic duct come together and empty into the duodenum. Because ampullary cancers develop very near the common bile duct, they often block the bile duct while they are still small and have not spread far. Bile duct blockage prevents normal flow of bile from the liver to the intestines. This causes bile chemicals to accumulate in the bloodstream, the skin, the eyes, and certain other tissues. The urine will also turn dar. This accumulation causes a yellowing of the skin and eyes and is known as jaundice. This easily recognized sign alerts patients that something is wrong. Because of this, ampullary cancers are usually diagnosed at an earlier stage than most pancreatic cancers. And earlier diagnosis means that people with ampullary cancers usually have a better outlook for survival than people with pancreatic cancers.

Ampullary cancers are included together with pancreatic cancer in this document because their treatments are very similar.

Endocrine tumors: Tumors of the endocrine pancreas are uncommon. As a group, they are known as neuroendocrine tumors, or more specifically, islet cell tumors. There are several subtypes of islet cell tumors that are named according to the type of hormone they produce. Islet cell tumors that make insulin are known as insulinomas, and tumors that make glucagon are called glucagonomas. Less often, islet cell tumors may produce other hormones. Most islet cell tumors are benign. Those that are malignant are called islet cell cancers or islet cell carcinomas.

It is very important to distinguish between exocrine and endocrine cancers of the pancreas. Each type of tumor has distinct risk factors and causes; produces different signs and symptoms; are diagnosed using different tests, are treated in different ways, and have a different prognosis (outlook for survival). The remaining sections of this document refer only to exocrine pancreatic and ampullary cancers.

 
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