Smoking Cessation, or How to Avert Half a Billion Premature Deaths - Now

NEJM Evid. 2024 Mar;3(3):EVIDe2300322. doi: 10.1056/EVIDe2300322. Epub 2024 Feb 27.

Abstract

An estimated 1.1 billion people currently smoke cigarettes,1 and 50 to 70% likely will die from tobacco-related causes.2 This translates to 550 to 770 million expected tobacco deaths among those who currently smoke. Many additional deaths will accrue in successive generations if the status quo continues. Of interest is the reversibility of the excess mortality risk of smoking. The meta-analysis by Cho et al.3 of four large national cohorts of nearly 1.5 million adults followed on average 14.8 years yielded 23.0 million person-years of observational data with over 120,000 deaths identified through linked death registries.

Publication types

  • Editorial

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Humans
  • Mortality, Premature*
  • Registries
  • Smoking Cessation*
  • Tobacco Products