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Title: Risk of oral cancer associated with gutka and other tobacco products: a hospital-based case-control study. Author: Mahapatra S, Kamath R, Shetty BK, Binu VS. Journal: J Cancer Res Ther; 2015; 11(1):199-203. PubMed ID: 25879362. Abstract: BACKGROUND: Although tobacco deaths rarely make headlines, tobacco kills one person every six seconds. Tobacco kills a third to half of all people who use it, on average 15 years prematurely. AIM OF THE STUDY: To study the risk of oral cancer associated with gutka consumption and other tobacco products. OBJECTIVE: (1) To find the association between gutka consumption and oral cancer. (2) To study the association between oral cancer and other tobacco products. METHODOLOGY: A case-control study of 134 cases and 268 controls, over a period of 5 months, from March 2013 to July 2013, was carried out at the Kasturba medical hospital in Manipal, India. The participants were personally interviewed by the investigator using a structured questionnaire on consumption of tobacco, poly-ingredient dip products, alcohol, dietary practices, oral hygiene practices and demographic status. RESULTS: Univariate logistic regression followed by multivariate logistic regression was done for identifying the risk factors and adjusted for the confounding variables. Analysis showed that gutka (<0.001, OR = 5.1 95% CI = 2.0-10.3), chewing tobacco (P < 0.001, OR = 6.0 95% CI = 2.3-15.7), supari (P < 0.001, OR = 11.4 95% CI = 3.4,38.2), betel quid (P < 0.001, OR = 6.4 95% CI = 2.6-15.5), bidi (P < 0.05, OR = 2.3 95% CI = 1.1-4.8) and alcohol (P < 0.001, OR = 3.7 95%CI = 1.8-7.5) had strong association with oral cancer upon adjustment. CONCLUSION: The study provided strong evidence that gutka, supari, chewing tobacco, betel quid, bidi and alcohol are independent risk factors for oral cancer.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]