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Historical Keynote Addresses

Richard Doll Gives Honorary Lecture on the History of Tobacco at New York Academy of Medicine

In what the New York Academy of Medicine described as “a rare appearance in the United States,” British epidemiologist Richard Doll delivered the Sylvia and Herbert Berger Lecture in late April on the medical history of tobacco. As one of the principal authors in the famous Doll and Hill report of 1950 helping to establish the relationship between tobacco and lung cancer, Doll was able to offer a unique perspective on the history of how epidemiological evidence accumulated to establish causation.

Below are some of the key facts and perspectives found in Doll’s historical review:

• Five case-control studies published in 1950, particularly the Wynder and Graham and the Doll and Hill studies, helped to radically change how people viewed tobacco and lung cancer. The two studies stood out because of their size; the precision with which lifelong non-smokers were defined; and the argument that led to their conclusion.

• Cohort studies were judged necessary because most accepted that an association had been shown but not that it implied cause and effect. Consequently, the now famous Doll and Hill cohort study of British medical doctors and the large Hammond and Horn study in the US were carried out and reported in 1954.

• The detailed evidence that led to the claim that cigarette smoking was an important cause of lung cancer was the extraordinary strength of the association (20 fold risk in heavy smokers), the diminution of risk with cessation of smoking, and the consistency of findings in different studies across populations.

• Following the reports by the Royal College of Physicians in London in 1962 and the Advisory Committee of the US Surgeon General in 1964, the idea that smoking was a major cause of lung cancer ceased to be seriously challenged.

• Since the 1960’s, cigarette smoking has been found to be positively associated with 50 causes of death or morbidity and to be negatively associated with eight or nine. Some associations are due to confounding, but the great majority arise because tobacco smoke is a contributory cause.

• In retrospect, strong resistance to the idea that smoking caused so much disease was due to the ubiquity of the habit, the novelty of the epidemiological techniques, and the primacy given to Koch’s postulates (the evidence from non-smokers with lung cancer was taken to prove that smoking could not be THE cause and the possibility that it might be A cause was inappropriately doubted).

Published May 1999
 

 
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