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Published in final edited form as: Cancer Prev Res (Phila). 2015 Feb;8(2):174–179. doi: 10.1158/1940-6207.CAPR-14-0291

Metformin use and lung cancer risk in patients with diabetes

Lori C Sakoda 1, Assiamira Ferrara 1, Ninah S Achacoso 1, Tiffany Peng 1, Samantha F Ehrlich 1, Charles P Quesenberry Jr 1, Laurel A Habel 1
PMCID: PMC4316372  NIHMSID: NIHMS651374  PMID: 25644512

Abstract

Methodologic biases may explain why observational studies examining metformin use in relation to lung cancer risk have produced inconsistent results. We conducted a cohort study to further investigate this relationship, accounting for potential biases. For 47,351 patients with diabetes aged ≥40 years, who completed a health-related survey administered between 1994 and 1996, data on prescribed diabetes medications were obtained from electronic pharmacy records. Follow-up for incident lung cancer occurred from January 1, 1997, until June 30, 2012. Using Cox regression, we estimated lung cancer risk associated with new use of metformin, along with total duration, recency, and cumulative dose (all modeled as time-dependent covariates), adjusting for potential confounding factors. During 428,557 person-years of follow-up, 747 patients were diagnosed with lung cancer. No association was found with duration, dose, or recency of metformin use and overall lung cancer risk. Among never smokers, however, ever use was inversely associated with lung cancer risk (hazard ratio (HR) 0.57; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.33-0.99), and risk appeared to decrease monotonically with longer use (≥5 years: HR, 0.48; 95% CI, 0.21-1.09). Among current smokers, corresponding risk estimates were >1.0, although not statistically significant. Consistent with this variation in effect by smoking history, longer use was suggestively associated with lower adenocarcinoma risk (HR, 0.69; 95% CI, 0.40-1.17), but higher small cell carcinoma risk (HR, 1.82; 95% CI, 0.85-3.91). In this population, we found no evidence that metformin use affects overall lung cancer risk. The observed variation in association by smoking history and histology requires further confirmation.

Keywords: metformin, lung cancer, diabetes, bias

INTRODUCTION

Metformin is commonly prescribed as first-line treatment for type 2 diabetes. Systemically, this biguanide drug improves blood glucose control and insulin sensitivity by lowering hepatic glucose production and intestinal glucose absorption and stimulating peripheral glucose uptake. Metformin may further possess chemopreventive and chemotherapeutic properties against cancer, although the underlying molecular mechanisms are not well understood (1, 2).

At the cellular level, metformin alters mitochondrial respiratory chain activity, inducing energy stress and reduced ATP production (3). Among the affected cellular pathways likely relevant to carcinogenesis is the activation of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) by liver kinase B1 (LKB1, a protein encoded by a known tumor suppressor gene), which leads to decreased growth factor signaling, protein and lipid synthesis, and proliferation via mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) inhibition. Growing evidence suggests that metformin also elicits cytostatic effects through AMPK-independent mechanisms (3, 4).

Metformin appears to suppress lung tumor growth in obese, hyperinsulinemic mice by increasing insulin sensitivity and activating AMPK (5). Metformin has been additionally shown to reduce lung tumor burden, but not tumor incidence, in non-diabetic mice exposed to the tobacco carcinogen 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone (NNK) (6). In this latter study, the corresponding inhibition of mTOR was associated with decreased phosphorylation of the insulin-like growth factor-I receptor/insulin receptor and not with AMPK activation. More recently, the metformin analogue phenformin was found to decrease tumor burden and increase survival in mice with Lkb1-deficient lung tumors (7).

Results from the observational studies examining whether metformin use is associated with lung cancer risk in patients with diabetes have been less consistent (8-15). Metformin use has been reported to reduce risk (10, 12-14) or have no relation (8, 9, 11, 15). Several time-related biases may explain in part why inverse associations have been detected (16, 17). Such biases can be introduced when unexposed time is misclassified as exposed in time-fixed analyses (immortal time bias), when the time window for capturing exposure differs between cases and controls (time-window bias), or when treatment differs across stages of the disease being treated and disease stage is also associated with risk of the outcome (time-lag bias). In the most rigorous study of metformin use and lung cancer risk to date, no association was found when evaluating dose-response by cumulative duration or dose and subgroup differences by smoking status (11).

In prior work assessing cancer risk in relation to pioglitazone use among Kaiser Permanente Northern California (KPNC) health plan members with diabetes, we noted that lung cancer incidence was not associated with ever use of metformin (15). Herein, we more comprehensively examine this drug-cancer relationship in a well-defined subset of that patient cohort (i.e., adults aged ≥40 years with diabetes who completed a baseline health-related survey), now with up to 15 years of follow-up. To mitigate methodologic biases, we evaluated lung cancer risk associated with new use of metformin, accounting for time-varying exposure to metformin and other diabetes medications and adjusting for diabetes duration, smoking history, and other potential confounding factors. We also evaluated the association of metformin use, in terms of total duration, recency of use, and cumulative dose, and lung cancer risk and the consistency of such associations by gender, smoking history, and tumor histology and stage.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Study Design and Population

This retrospective cohort study was conducted under a waiver of informed consent approved by the KPNC Institutional Review Board. KPNC is a large integrated health care delivery system, with an enrolled membership that is generally representative of the insured population in Northern California, except for extremes of the socioeconomic spectrum (18).

Study eligibility was limited to persons in the KPNC Diabetes Registry (19, 20), who completed a health survey administered from 1994 to 1996 and were aged ≥40 years at baseline (January 1, 1997). The KPNC Diabetes Registry was established in 1993 to capture all health plan members with diabetes from automated databases on an annual basis, who meet at least one of the following criteria: a primary hospital discharge diagnosis of diabetes; at least two outpatient visit diagnoses of diabetes; any prescription of a diabetes-related medication; and any laboratory record of an abnormal hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) test. At baseline, those who lacked continuous KPNC membership for at least two years, had previously used metformin, or had a prior cancer were excluded. These exclusion criteria ensured a more complete assessment of patient medical history, including prescribed medications and comorbid conditions; examination of new metformin users only; and identification of incident cancer diagnoses during follow-up, respectively.

Exposure and Outcome Measures

Record linkage to the KPNC pharmacy database permitted identification of all prescribed diabetes medications filled from January 1, 1995, onward for each patient. Diabetes medications included metformin, sulfonylureas, thiazolidinediones (TZDs), insulin, and other oral agents. Metformin was first available as part of the KPNC formulary in May 1995 (21).

Patients were defined as ever users of a given diabetes medication if they had filled two or more prescriptions for that medication within a six-month period. Total duration of metformin use was calculated as the number of days supplied for each metformin prescription. Recency of metformin use was defined into mutually exclusive categories of former use, recent use, or current use for <5 or ≥5 years. Current use encompassed the period(s) of days supplied. Recent use encompassed the one-year period after end of current use, while former use encompassed the period more than one year after end of current use. Cumulative dose was calculated as the total prescribed dose, defined as the number of pills supplied per prescription multiplied by the dose per pill, for all prescriptions of metformin dispensed until the end of follow-up. If a prescription was not used entirely when follow-up ended, then total duration and prescribed cumulative dose were adjusted, only counting pills taken before the end of follow-up.

Data on the following potential confounders were collected by survey: race/ethnicity, smoking status and pack-year history, alcohol use, income, education level, diabetes duration, and body mass index (BMI). Baseline HbA1c and creatinine levels were obtained from laboratory records. Charlson comorbidity index scores were derived using data on comorbid conditions documented in outpatient and inpatient visit records in the two years prior to baseline (22).

Patients diagnosed with lung and other cancers were identified by record linkage to the KPNC Cancer Registry. All data elements in the KPNC Cancer Registry, including tumor stage and histology, are ascertained following standards of the U.S. National Cancer Institute’s Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Program.

Statistical Analysis

Patients were followed from baseline until diagnosis of lung or another cancer, a gap of ≥4 months in membership or prescription benefits, death, or study close (June 30, 2012), whichever occurred earliest. To avoid immortal time bias (i.e., misclassification of unexposed time as exposed), person-time from the start of follow-up until first use of a given medication was classified as never use for that medication. Once the definition of ever use was met, a patient was classified as a user of that medication, even if discontinuation occurred later.

Point estimates and 95% confidence intervals of the relative hazards for lung cancer associated with ever use of metformin, along with total duration, recency of use, and cumulative dose, were calculated using Cox regression. The reference group was never users of metformin, which included users of other diabetes medications. Measures of metformin (i.e., ever use, total duration, recency of use, cumulative dose) and other classes of diabetes medications (i.e., sulfonylureas, TZDs, insulin, all others), in addition to two separate covariates indicating never use of any diabetes medication and never having two prescriptions of the same medication filled within six months, were modeled as time-dependent covariates. Regression models were stratified on age and adjusted for other potential confounding variables selected a priori, including gender, race/ethnicity, median household income, education level, ever use of other diabetes medications, diabetes duration, smoking status, pack-years smoked, alcohol use, baseline creatinine and HbA1c levels, BMI, and Charlson comorbidity index.

Following the same approach, analyses lagging metformin use by two years (i.e., excluding use in the prior two years at each time point during follow-up) were conducted to examine the extent to which the timing of metformin exposure might influence lung cancer risk. Since insulin and sulfonylureas have been previously reported to alter cancer risk, the choice of the reference (non-exposed) group may also impact risk estimates. To address this concern, sensitivity analyses were conducted separately among non-insulin users and among users of sulfonylureas only at baseline. These respective analyses permitted direct comparisons of patients who used metformin to patients who used other non-insulin medications and of patients who switched from using sulfonylureas to metformin to patients who used sulfonylureas only. In addition, subgroup analyses were conducted to explore whether risk associated with metformin use differed by gender, smoking status (current, former, never), tumor histology (adenocarcinoma, squamous cell, small cell), and tumor stage (local, regional, distant).

RESULTS

In total, 47,351 patients met the study eligibility criteria. Within the two years prior to the start of follow-up, 51.4% had used sulfonylureas, 30.2% had used insulin, <0.1% had used other oral agents, and 24.7% had been on dietary therapy only. During 428,557 person-years of follow-up [mean (sd) = 9.0 (5.3) years], 747 patients were diagnosed with lung cancer.

Metformin users were generally younger at baseline than non-users [mean (sd): 59.3 (10.1) vs. 65.0 (11.5) years], with over 60% initiating metformin use within the first four years of follow-up (Table 1). Users were more commonly female and never smokers and less commonly non-Hispanic white than non-users. On average, users also had higher glycated HbA1c levels, slightly higher BMI, a shorter duration of diabetes, and lower comorbidity index scores than non-users.

TABLE 1.

Baseline characteristics of 47,351 patients with diabetes

Ever user
n= 21,526 (45.5%)
Never user
n= 25,825 (54.5%)
n % n %
Age, years
 40-49 4,228 19.6 3,023 11.7
 50-59 6,801 31.6 4,968 19.2
 60-69 6,831 31.7 7,755 30.0
 70+ 3,666 17.0 10,079 39.0
Sex
 Male 11,256 52.3 14,292 55.3
 Female 10,270 47.7 11,533 44.7
Race/Ethnicity
 Non-Hispanic white 10,750 49.9 14,289 55.3
 Black 2,420 11.2 3,335 12.9
 Asian or Pacific Islander 3,173 14.7 2,358 9.1
 Hispanic 2,921 13.6 2,543 9.8
 Other 580 2.7 745 2.9
 Missing 1,682 7.8 2,555 9.9
Median Household Income
 Low 10,092 46.9 13,010 50.4
 High 11,134 51.7 11,975 46.4
 Missing 300 1.4 840 3.2
Education Level
 Less than high school 2,553 11.9 3,990 15.5
 High school graduate 4,954 23.0 6,020 23.3
 Some college 5,775 26.8 6,201 24.0
 College graduate 2,294 10.7 2,220 8.6
 Post-graduate 2,466 11.5 2,684 10.4
 Missing 3,484 16.2 4,710 18.2
Smoking History
 Never 9,013 41.9 9,470 36.7
 Former 6,949 32.3 8,995 34.8
 Current 2,031 9.4 2,438 9.4
 Missing 3,533 16.4 4,922 19.1
Alcohol History
 Never 3,638 16.9 4,255 16.5
 Former 4,439 20.6 5,958 23.1
 Current 9,557 44.4 10,179 39.4
 Missing 3,892 18.1 5,433 21.0
HbA1c, %
 < 7 4,467 20.8 7,502 29.0
 7 - 7.9 4,354 20.2 5,199 20.1
 8 - 8.9 3,202 14.9 3,279 12.7
 9 - 9.9 2,267 10.5 2,075 8.0
 10+ 3,975 18.5 2,978 11.5
 Missing 3,261 15.1 4,792 18.6
Body mass index, kg/m2a 29.7 (26.3-34.2) 27.9 (24.8-31.9)
Creatininea 0.8 (0.7-1.0) 1.0 (0.8-1.3)
Time since diabetes diagnosis, years a 6.0 (3.0-11.0) 11.0 (5.0-19.0)
Charlson comorbidity index
 1 15,017 69.8 14,569 56.4
 2 5,301 24.6 6,754 26.2
 3+ 1,208 5.6 4,502 17.4
Time since initiation of metformin, months
 <12 3,560 16.5
 12-23 3,485 16.2
 24-35 3,385 15.7
 36-47 3,088 14.4
 48+ 8,008 37.2
a

Median (interquartile range)

Accounting for these and other potential confounding factors, ever use of metformin was not associated with overall lung cancer risk (Table 2; HR, 1.02; 95% CI, 0.85-1.22). Likewise, no clear associations were found with total duration, recency of use, or cumulative dose. Results from sensitivity analyses restricted to sulfonylurea users or non-insulin users at baseline and those lagging metformin use by two years were also not materially different (Supplementary Table S1).

TABLE 2.

Estimates of lung cancer risk associated with metformin use

Metformin Use No. of events Person-Years Adjusteda HR (95% CI)
Never 464 257,542.42 1.00 (reference)
Ever 283 171,015.06 1.02 (0.85-1.22)
Total duration, years
  <2.0 100 61,047.00 1.02 (0.81-1.28)
  2.0 - 4.9 93 56,423.33 1.00 (0.78-1.28)
  ≥5.0 90 53,544.73 1.04 (0.78-1.37)
Recency of use
  Former 75 33,496.72 1.19 (0.89-1.58)
  Recent 37 21,484.37 1.07 (0.75-1.52)
  Current
   <5.0 years 107 75,365.20 0.93 (0.74-1.17)
   ≥5.0 years 64 40,668.76 1.04 (0.76-1.42)
Cumulative dose (mg), quartiles
  ≤750,000 91 55,360.21 1.00 (0.79-1.27)
  750,001 – 2,300,000 84 52,118.33 0.98 (0.76-1.27)
  2,300,001 – 4,930,000 67 41,097.81 1.04 (0.77-1.39)
  >4,930,000 41 22,438.70 1.21 (0.83-1.77)
a

Stratified on age and adjusted for gender, race/ethnicity, birth year, diabetes duration, BMI, alcohol use, Charlson comorbidity index, smoking history (status and pack-years), education, income level, creatinine level, HbA1c level, and use of other diabetes medications

When stratifying by baseline smoking status, however, ever use of metformin was associated with a decrease in risk among never smokers (Table 3; HR, 0.57; 95% CI, 0.33-0.99). Despite the limited number of metformin users diagnosed with lung cancer in this subgroup, risk appeared to decrease monotonically with longer duration of use, although not with greater cumulative dose. The decrease in risk associated with current use for ≥5 years (HR, 0.54; 95% CI 0.22-1.35) was comparable to that associated with any use for ≥5 years (HR, 0.48; 95% CI 0.21-1.09), albeit the decrease in risk associated with current use for <5 years was more pronounced (HR, 0.34; 95% CI 0.14-0.81). Among current smokers, corresponding risk estimates associated with metformin use were in the opposite direction (i.e., HRs >1.0), but none attained statistical significance. Among former smokers, associations between metformin use and lung cancer risk were generally null.

TABLE 3.

Estimates of lung cancer risk associated with metformin use, by smoking status

Metformin Use Never smoker
Former Smoker
Current Smoker
pinteractionb
No. of events Person-Years Adjusteda HR (95% CI) No. of events Person-Years Adjusteda HR (95% CI) No. of events Person-Years Adjusteda HR (95% CI)
Never 51 103,651.05 1.00 (reference) 222 84,763.54 1.00 (reference) 112 21,977.45 1.00 (reference)
Ever 29 73,907.55 0.57 (0.33-0.99) 114 54,161.75 0.93 (0.71-1.23) 91 15,298.80 1.25 (0.88-1.77) 0.11
Total duration, years
  <2.0 10 25,648.96 0.66 (0.32-1.33) 38 19,466.59 0.88 (0.61-1.27) 35 5,792.32 1.38 (0.91-2.09)
  2.0 - 4.9 9 24,315.93 0.56 (0.26-1.20) 41 17,936.27 1.00 (0.69-1.45) 24 5,037.57 0.96 (0.58-1.57)
  ≥5.0 10 23,942.66 0.48 (0.21-1.09) 35 16,758.89 0.93 (0.61-1.44) 32 4,468.91 1.45 (0.87-2.43) 0.35
Recency of use
  Former 9 14,007.31 0.79 (0.35-1.80) 29 11,092.11 1.00 (0.64-1.56) 21 3,083.62 1.15 (0.66-2.00)
  Recent 7 9,251.23 1.10 (0.47-2.56) 16 6,584.15 1.05 (0.62-1.78) 12 2,054.41 1.30 (0.69-2.46)
  Current
   <5.0 years 6 32,290.55 0.34 (0.14-0.81) 44 23,924.57 0.87 (0.61-1.23) 36 6,833.89 1.24 (0.82-1.89)
   ≥5.0 years 7 18,358.46 0.54 (0.22-1.35) 25 12,560.92 0.93 (0.58-1.50) 22 3,326.87 1.39 (0.79-2.44) 0.35
Cumulative dose (mg), quartiles
  ≤750,000 8 23,566.03 0.56 (0.26-1.22) 37 17,291.58 0.92 (0.64-1.32) 31 5,194.28 1.34 (0.87-2.06)
  750,001 – 2,300,000 10 22,464.73 0.67 (0.32-1.39) 35 16,423.18 0.93 (0.63-1.37) 22 4,567.76 0.99 (0.60-1.64)
  2,300,001 – 4,930,000 5 17,918.09 0.38 (0.14-1.03) 23 13,135.99 0.82 (0.51-1.32) 26 3,596.58 1.50 (0.90-2.50)
  >4,930,000 6 9,958.71 0.72 (0.26-2.00) 19 7,311.01 1.26 (0.72-2.20) 12 1,940.18 1.35 (0.66-2.75) 0.46
a

Stratified on age and adjusted for gender, race/ethnicity, birth year, diabetes duration, BMI, alcohol use, Charlson comorbidity index, pack-year history (for former and current smokers), education, income level, creatinine level, HbA1c level, and use of other diabetes medications;

b

Based on test for interaction between metformin use and smoking status (never, former, current) on lung cancer risk

Results for subgroup analyses by histology were consistent with findings observed for subgroups based on smoking history (Table 4). Greater cumulative use of metformin was suggestively associated with lower risk of adenocarcinoma, the histology diagnosed most frequently in never smokers, yet higher risk of small cell carcinoma, the histology diagnosed almost exclusively in smokers. Patients who used metformin for ≥5 years, relative to never users, appeared less likely to develop adenocarcinoma (HR, 0.69; 95% CI, 0.40-1.17), but more likely to develop small cell carcinoma (HR, 1.82; 95% CI, 0.85-3.91). Risk estimates for current use for ≥5 years were generally comparable to those for any use for ≥5 years for each histologic type, although recent use was associated with increased risk of small cell carcinoma (HR, 2.29; 95% CI, 1.03-5.07), compared to never use. When comparing those who took the highest cumulative doses of metformin to never users, associations in opposite directions were similarly observed for risk of adenocarcinoma (HR, 0.61; 95% CI, 0.28-1.30) and small cell carcinoma (HR, 3.11; 95% CI, 1.22-7.95), although dose-response patterns were not monotonic. There was no clear evidence to suggest that the association between metformin use and lung cancer risk differed by gender or tumor stage (Supplementary Tables S2 and S3).

TABLE 4.

Estimates of lung cancer risk associated with metformin use, by histologic type

Metformin Use Adenocarcinoma
Squamous Cell Carcinoma
Small Cell Carcinoma
No. of events Adjusteda HR (95% CI) No. of events Adjusteda HR (95% CI) No. of events Adjusteda HR (95% CI)
Never 121 1.00 (reference) 88 1.00 (reference) 62 1.00 (reference)
Ever 80 0.88 (0.62-1.25) 52 1.09 (0.71-1.68) 36 1.23 (0.74-2.04)
Total duration, years
  <2.0 26 0.92 (0.59-1.45) 16 0.94 (0.54-1.66) 14 1.23 (0.66-2.29)
  2.0 - 4.9 30 0.99 (0.63-1.54) 16 1.10 (0.60-2.01) 8 0.88 (0.39-1.98)
  ≥5.0 24 0.69 (0.40-1.17) 20 1.46 (0.76-2.79) 14 1.82 (0.85-3.91)
Recency of use
  Former 23 0.99 (0.59-1.67) 12 1.10 (0.54-2.23) 8 1.45 (0.61-3.40)
  Recent 11 0.94 (0.49-1.79) 3 0.52 (0.16-1.69) 8 2.29 (1.03-5.07)
  Current
   <5.0 years 31 0.93 (0.60-1.43) 23 1.17 (0.71-1.95) 11 0.84 (0.42-1.67)
   ≥5.0 years 15 0.61 (0.33-1.13) 14 1.30 (0.65-2.62) 9 1.58 (0.68-3.69)
Cumulative dose (mg), quartiles
  ≤750,000 21 0.79 (0.49-1.28) 18 1.14 (0.66-1.95) 11 1.08 (0.55-2.14)
  750,001 – 2,300,000 31 1.12 (0.72-1.74) 11 0.80 (0.41-1.58) 8 0.94 (0.42-2.09)
  2,300,001 – 4,930,000 19 0.80 (0.46-1.39) 12 1.17 (0.58-2.37) 9 1.59 (0.70-3.61)
  >4,930,000 9 0.61 (0.28-1.30) 11 2.03 (0.90-4.55) 8 3.11 (1.22-7.95)
a

Stratified on age and adjusted for gender, race/ethnicity, birth year, diabetes duration, BMI, alcohol use, Charlson comorbidity index, smoking history (status and pack-years), education, income level, creatinine level, HbA1c level, and use of other diabetes medications

DISCUSSION

Consistent with our prior research (15), we found no association between ever use of metformin and overall lung cancer risk in patients with diabetes. We also found no evidence of an association with total duration of use, recency of use, or cumulative dose. However, we noted suggestive, but intriguing differences in risk associated with metformin use between subgroups defined by smoking history and tumor histology.

As with all observational studies, our findings should be interpreted in the context of inherent limitations. Given our inability to differentiate patients with type 2 vs. type 1 diabetes, eligibility was restricted to patients aged ≥40 years, when the vast majority of diabetes is type 2. Use of metformin and other diabetes medications was determined solely from filled prescription records, and no data on medication adherence were collected. However, exposure misclassification was minimized by requiring two or more prescriptions of a given medication to have been filled within a six-month period, and recall bias was avoided by using electronic pharmacy records. While a fairly large cohort of patients with diabetes was followed over a 15-year period, the number of metformin users who developed lung cancer was still limited. This constraint reduced the precision of risk estimates, particularly in subgroup analyses. Also, while risk estimates were adjusted for a number of potential confounding variables, including BMI, smoking status, and pack-years smoked, these variables were assessed only once (i.e, prior to baseline), and residual confounding may still exist due to incompletely measured or unmeasured variables.

Our primary findings are compatible with those of two case-control studies conducted using the U.K. General Practice Research Database. Bodmer et al. (8) found no evidence of an inverse association between long-term metformin use (≥40 prescriptions) and lung cancer risk (odds ratio (OR), 1.09; 95% CI, 0.85-1.38). Among patients with type 2 diabetes newly treated with oral hypoglycemic agents, Smiechowski et al. (11) similarly found no decrease in risk of lung cancer associated with increasing number of metformin prescriptions (≥46 prescriptions: OR, 1.00; 95% CI, 0.75-1.33), total duration, or cumulative dose. In both studies, time-window and time-lag biases were minimized by matching controls to cases on time of exposure assessment prior to the index (diagnosis) date and accounting for potential confounding by diabetes duration, respectively. Regression models were adjusted for BMI and smoking status (along with other potential confounders by Smiechowski et al. only), although not for pack-years smoked. In contrast, others have found striking reductions in risk associated with metformin use of up to 52%, likely from failing to account for time-related biases (10, 13, 14).

To avoid immortal time and time-lag biases, we examined metformin and other diabetes medications as time-dependent exposures and controlled for diabetes duration and HbA1c level (as a proxy for severity) in our cohort analyses. However, diabetes duration did not appear to be a strong confounder in our study population, consistent with prior evidence that KPNC patients with diabetes are not at altered risk for lung cancer (23). We evaluated only new use of metformin, although most metformin users had previously used sulfonylureas or insulin. To address concerns about the lack of a single comparator drug and the possible link between insulin use and increased lung cancer risk (8), we conducted sensitivity analyses comparing metformin users to either sulfonylurea only users or other non-insulin drug users, which yielded similar results to our primary analyses.

We further explored whether lung cancer risk associated with metformin use differed by smoking history and tumor characteristics, which has been conducted in only a few other studies. Smiechowski et al. (11) found no clear difference in association for ever use of metformin by smoking history (never smokers: OR, 1.2; 95% CI, 0.62-2.26; ever smokers: OR, 0.90, 95% CI, 0.70-1.15), but their mean follow-up was shorter than ours (5.6 vs. 9.0 years). Since we observed a stronger inverse association with ≥5 year-duration of metformin use in never smokers, longer follow-up may be needed to detect this subgroup effect if it truly exists. Mazzone et al. (10) reported different patterns of metformin use by histologic subtype among lung cancer patients. However, to our knowledge, our study is the first to suggest any variation in association by lung cancer histology, with metformin users (vs. non-users) being less likely to develop adenocarcinoma, but more likely to develop small cell carcinoma.

Given lung cancer is an etiologically heterogeneous disease, such subgroup effects could exist, although biological explanations for these differences are unknown and chance cannot be ruled out. It is also possible that among never smokers, metformin users utilized health care less often and were less likely to have lung cancer detected than non-users, whereas among current smokers, metformin users utilized health care more often and were more likely to have lung cancer detected than non-users. Yet, the proportion of localized disease in users than non-users was fairly similar (i.e., 14% vs. 12%), suggesting minimal detection bias.

In conclusion, we found no evidence that metformin use affects overall risk of lung cancer in patients with diabetes. The suggested variation in the association by smoking history and lung cancer histology warrants confirmation (or refutation) by others. To the extent possible, future studies of metformin use and lung cancer risk should be conducted in larger, well-characterized cohorts of persons with diabetes over an extended period of follow-up, accounting for time-related and other potential biases.

Supplementary Material

1

Acknowledgments

We thank Dr. Gary Friedman for his helpful comments on this paper.

Financial Support: NIH R01 CA098838 awarded to L. Habel

Conflict of Interest Disclosures

A.F., C.P.Q., and L.A.H. have received research funding from Takeda to Kaiser Foundation Research Institute for a study of pioglitazone and cancer and from Sanofi through a subcontract from University of North Carolina to Kaiser Foundation Research Institute for a study of insulin glargine and cancer. L.A.H. has received additional research funding from Genentech to Kaiser Foundation Research Institute for a study of HER2+ breast cancer, including risk of cardiotoxicity following trastuzumab.

Footnotes

Preliminary study results were presented by L. Sakoda in a mini-symposium session at the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting in 2013.

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