Toenail selenium concentration and lung cancer in male smokers (Finland).
Journal
  Cancer causes & control : CCC.
Citation
  Cancer Causes Control. 13(10):923-8
Publication date
  2002 Dec
Authors
  Hartman TJ
Taylor PR
Alfthan G
Fagerstrom R
Virtamo J
Mark SD
Virtanen M
Barrett MJ
Albanes D
Investigators
  Terryl Hartman
Grant agencies
  National Cancer Institute
Grants
  NCI N01 CN 45165
MeSH headings
  Lung Neoplasms
Nails
Selenium
Smoking
MeSH qualifiers
  epidemiology
chemistry
analysis
adverse effects
Abstract
  BACKGROUND: The objective of this investigation was to evaluate the association between toenail selenium concentration and lung cancer risk in male smokers. METHODS: We conducted a nested case-control study within the Alpha-Tocopherol Beta-Carotene Cancer Prevention Study cohort. This substudy included 250 randomly selected incident lung cancer cases and 250 controls matched on age (up to +/- 5 years), intervention group assignment, and date of randomization (+/- 15 days). Odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were determined using conditional logistic regression methods. Finland began fortification of agricultural fertilizers in the fall of 1984, increasing the dietary intake, plasma, and toenail selenium concentrations for the population. The present analyses were based on the calculated residual of toenail selenium after regressing it on date of randomization. The selenium residual and the interaction of the residual with date of randomization were included in models with smoking status and body mass index as covariates. RESULTS: We observed a suggestion of a protective association for higher selenium status among men who entered the trial early (when the range of selenium values included very low levels). The OR for men with adjusted toenail selenium concentrations at the 75th percentile compared to those with the lowest selenium concentrations ranged between 0.20 (0.09-0.44) for men randomized earliest in the trial and 0.61 (0.27-1.41) for men randomized in the fifth year. CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that low selenium status may be associated with increased risk for lung cancer.
Medline ID
  22475466