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News (Media Awareness Project) - New Zealand: Pot Use Linked To Higher Lung Cancer Risks
Title:New Zealand: Pot Use Linked To Higher Lung Cancer Risks
Published On:2008-01-30
Source:Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC)
Fetched On:2008-01-31 21:35:22
POT USE LINKED TO HIGHER LUNG CANCER RISKS

HONG KONG -- Smoking a joint is equivalent to 20 cigarettes in terms
of lung cancer risk, scientists in New Zealand have found, as they
warned of an "epidemic" of lung cancers linked to cannabis.

Studies in the past have demonstrated that cannabis can cause cancer,
but few have established a strong link between cannabis use and the
actual incidence of lung cancer.

In an article published in the European Respiratory Journal, the
scientists said cannabis could be expected to harm the airways more
than tobacco as its smoke contained twice the level of carcinogens,
such as polyaromatic hydrocarbons, compared with tobacco cigarettes.

The method of smoking also increases the risk, since joints are
typically smoked without a proper filter and almost to the very tip,
which increases the amount of smoke inhaled. The cannabis smoker
inhales more deeply and for longer, facilitating the deposition of
carcinogens in the airways.

"Cannabis smokers end up with five times more carbon monoxide in their
bloodstream (than tobacco smokers)," team leader Richard Beasley, at
the Medical Research Institute of New Zealand, said in a telephone
interview.

"There are higher concentrations of carcinogens in cannabis smoke ...
what is intriguing to us is there is so little work done on cannabis
when there is so much done on tobacco."

The researchers interviewed 79 lung cancer patients and sought to
identify the main risk factors for the disease, such as smoking,
family history and occupation.

The patients were questioned about alcohol and cannabis
consumption.

In this high-exposure group, lung cancer risk rose by 5.7 times for
patients who smoked more than a joint a day for 10 years, or two
joints a day for five years, after adjusting for other variables,
including cigarette smoking.
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