Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Brad Rodu is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Brad Rodu.


Critical Reviews in Oral Biology & Medicine | 2004

Smokeless Tobacco and Oral Cancer: A Review of the Risks and Determinants

Brad Rodu; Christer Jansson

Smokeless tobacco has been associated with oral cancer for many decades. The purpose of this article is to review research relevant to this association, including epidemiologic studies, studies of putative carcinogens such as tobacco-specific nitrosamines (TSNAs) and other contaminants, and possible cancer inhibitors. Epidemiologic studies addressing this issue primarily consist of case-control studies. They show that the use of chewing tobacco and moist snuff is associated with very low risks for cancers of the oral cavity and related structures (relative risks [RR] from 0.6 to 1.7). The use of dry snuff is associated with higher RRs, ranging from 4 to 13, while the RRs from smokeless tobacco, unspecified as to type, are intermediate (RR = 1.5 to 2.8). With regard to TSNAs, historical levels in American moist snuff products were higher than those in their Swedish counterparts, but levels in contemporary products are uniformly low. TSNA levels in chewing tobacco have always been low, but levels in dry snuff have been higher, including some very high levels in current products. In general, smokeless tobacco users are not exposed to significant levels of cadmium, lead, benzo(a)pyrene, polonium-210, and formaldehyde, when compared with concentrations of these compounds in foods. Finally, low oral cancer risk from smokeless tobacco use may be influenced by the presence of cancer inhibitors, mainly anti-oxidants, in smokeless tobacco products.


Cancer | 1996

Declining cancer mortality in the United States

Philip A. Cole; Brad Rodu

The overall age‐adjusted cancer mortality rate had been increasing in the United States for as long as such statistics have been kept. This trend was reversed and a decline in cancer mortality began in 1991.


Harm Reduction Journal | 2013

A fresh look at tobacco harm reduction: the case for the electronic cigarette

Riccardo Polosa; Brad Rodu; Pasquale Caponnetto; Marilena Maglia; Cirino Raciti

Smokers of any age can reap substantial health benefits by quitting. In fact, no other single public health effort is likely to achieve a benefit comparable to large-scale smoking cessation. Surveys document that most smokers would like to quit, and many have made repeated efforts to do so. However, conventional smoking cessation approaches require nicotine addicted smokers to abstain from tobacco and nicotine entirely. Many smokers are unable – or at least unwilling – to achieve this goal, and so they continue smoking in the face of impending adverse health consequences. In effect, the status quo in smoking cessation presents smokers with just two unpleasant alternatives: quit or suffer the harmful effects of continuing smoking. But, there is a third choice for smokers: tobacco harm reduction. It involves the use of alternative sources of nicotine, including modern smokeless tobacco products like snus and the electronic cigarette (E-cig), or even pharmaceutical nicotine products, as a replacement for smoking. E-cigs might be the most promising product for tobacco harm reduction to date, because, besides delivering nicotine vapour without the combustion products that are responsible for nearly all of smoking’s damaging effect, they also replace some of the rituals associated with smoking behaviour. Thus it is likely that smokers who switch to E-cigs will achieve large health gains. The focus of this article is on the health effects of using an E-cig, with consideration given to the acceptability, safety and effectiveness of this product as a long-term substitute for smoking.


Harm Reduction Journal | 2006

Tobacco harm reduction: an alternative cessation strategy for inveterate smokers

Brad Rodu; William T. Godshall

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, about 45 million Americans continue to smoke, even after one of the most intense public health campaigns in history, now over 40 years old. Each year some 438,000 smokers die from smoking-related diseases, including lung and other cancers, cardiovascular disorders and pulmonary diseases.Many smokers are unable – or at least unwilling – to achieve cessation through complete nicotine and tobacco abstinence; they continue smoking despite the very real and obvious adverse health consequences. Conventional smoking cessation policies and programs generally present smokers with two unpleasant alternatives: quit, or die.A third approach to smoking cessation, tobacco harm reduction, involves the use of alternative sources of nicotine, including modern smokeless tobacco products. A substantial body of research, much of it produced over the past decade, establishes the scientific and medical foundation for tobacco harm reduction using smokeless tobacco products.This report provides a description of traditional and modern smokeless tobacco products, and of the prevalence of their use in the United States and Sweden. It reviews the epidemiologic evidence for low health risks associated with smokeless use, both in absolute terms and in comparison to the much higher risks of smoking. The report also describes evidence that smokeless tobacco has served as an effective substitute for cigarettes among Swedish men, who consequently have among the lowest smoking-related mortality rates in the developed world. The report documents the fact that extensive misinformation about ST products is widely available from ostensibly reputable sources, including governmental health agencies and major health organizations.The American Council on Science and Health believes that strong support of tobacco harm reduction is fully consistent with its mission to promote sound science in regulation and in public policy, and to assist consumers in distinguishing real health threats from spurious health claims. As this report documents, there is a strong scientific and medical foundation for tobacco harm reduction, and it shows great potential as a public health strategy to help millions of smokers.


Journal of Internal Medicine | 2002

Impact of smokeless tobacco use on smoking in northern Sweden.

Brad Rodu; Bernd Stegmayr; Salmir Nasic; Kjell Asplund

Abstract. Rodu B, Stegmayr B, Nasic S, Asplund K (University of Alabama at Birmingham, AL, USA and University Hospital, Umeå, Sweden). Impact of smokeless tobacco use on smoking in northern Sweden. J Intern Med 2002; 252: 398–404.


Journal of Internal Medicine | 2004

Influence of smoking and snus on the prevalence and incidence of type 2 diabetes amongst men: the northern sweden MONICA study

Mats Eliasson; Kjell Asplund; Salmar Nasic; Brad Rodu

Objective.  To explore the effect of smoking and smokeless tobacco, ‘snus’, on the risk of type 2 diabetes.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1995

SUCRALFATE FOR RADIATION MUCOSITIS: RESULTS OF A DOUBLE-BLIND RANDOMIZED TRIAL

Ruby F. Meredith; Merle M. Salter; Robert Y. Kim; S.A. Spencer; Burkhard Weppelmann; Brad Rodu; Judy Smith; Jeanette Lee

PURPOSE To determine if addition of the ulcer-coating polysaccharide sucralfate could improve symptomatic relief of radiation mucositis over a popular combination of antacid, diphenhydramine, and viscous lidocaine alone. METHODS AND MATERIALS A double-blind study was conducted in which nurses and pharmacists coded patient groups and distributed medication in a manner blinded to both the patients and physicians. Eligible patients receiving radiation to the head and neck and/or chest sites that included the esophagus were randomized to a standard combination of antacid, diphenhydramine, and viscous lidocaine vs. the same solution plus sucralfate. Eligible patients were those receiving >40 Gy at 1.8 Gy/fraction, one fraction/day, five fractions/week. Participating patients were stratified between chest, small field head and neck, and large field head and neck. The patients subjective evaluation of throat soreness and relief with medication was elicited as well as physician observations and smears for Candidiasis screening. Medication was prescribed when the patient became symptomatic and concomitant use of other locally effective nonstudy agents was not allowed. The ability to eat various consistency of foods was graded 0-5, with 5 indicating no compromise of ability to ingest a food compared to baseline. Statistical analysis included mean + SD for food and soreness scores, paired t-test, and two-way analyses of variance to evaluate effects of site and treatment group on the changes in scores. RESULTS Over 2 years, 111 patients were entered. Because some withdrew and others did not require medication, results are presented for evaluable patients in each category. Mild adverse effects from the medication solution (usually mouth discomfort) were reported by <10% of patients in each treatment group among 106 patients evaluable for toxicity. There was a comparable incidence of mild-moderate mucositis for the two treatment groups. Severe mucositis was noted in two patients of the standard medication group and none among patients receiving sucralfate. The groups were comparable for indicators including degree of soreness, dietary changes, and objective measures or mucosal irritation or infection. For the head and neck patients there was a significant worsening in soreness and in the ability to eat in both treatment groups, whereas patients treated to the chest had less nutritional change. Multivariate analysis including control for confounding factors did not detect treatment effects for any of the response measures. No patient had occult fungal infection detected by oral pathology evaluation of routine mucosal scrapings. CONCLUSIONS A trend (that was not statistically significant) of less severe radiation mucositis was noted for patients receiving sucralfate in addition to the combination of viscous lidocaine, diphenhydramine, and antacid for nonulcerative radiation mucositis.


Journal of Internal Medicine | 2003

Evolving patterns of tobacco use in northern Sweden

Brad Rodu; Bernd Stegmayr; Salmir Nasic; Philip A. Cole; Kjell Asplund

Abstract.  Rodu B, Stegmayr B, Nasic S, Cole P, Asplund K (University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, USA; Umeå Hospital, Umeå, Sweden). Evolving patterns of tobacco use in northern Sweden. J Intern Med 2003; 253: 660–665.


Scandinavian Journal of Public Health | 2005

The decline of smoking in northern Sweden.

Birgitta Stegmayr; Mats Eliasson; Brad Rodu

For decades men in Sweden have smoked at far lower rates than those in comparable countries. Previous studies showed that snus use played a major role in low smoking rates among men in northern Sweden; daily smoking declined from 19% (95% CI 16—22%) in 1986 to 11% (CI 8.9—14%) in 1999. The prevalence of smoking among all men is now 9% (CI 7.0— 11%) and only 3% (CI 0.1—5.4%) among men age 25—34 years; the prevalence of exclusive snus use is 27% (CI 24—30%) and 34% (CI 27—42%) respectively. Combined smoking and snus use, an unstable and transient category, was under 5% in all surveys and was 2.2% (CI 1.4—3.4%) by 2004. For the first time snus use is also associated with a decrease in smoking prevalence among women. These patterns of tobacco use have implications for all smoking-dominated societies.


Harm Reduction Journal | 2008

Switching to smokeless tobacco as a smoking cessation method: evidence from the 2000 National Health Interview Survey

Brad Rodu; Carl V Phillips

BackgroundAlthough smokeless tobacco (ST) use has played a major role in the low smoking prevalence among Swedish men, there is little information at the population level about ST as a smoking cessation aid in the U.S.MethodsWe used the 2000 National Health Interview Survey to derive population estimates for the number of smokers who had tried twelve methods in their most recent quit attempt, and for the numbers and proportions who were former or current smokers at the time of the survey.ResultsAn estimated 359,000 men switched to smokeless tobacco in their most recent quit attempt. This method had the highest proportion of successes among those attempting it (73%), representing 261,000 successful quitters (switchers). In comparison, the nicotine patch was used by an estimated 2.9 million men in their most recent quit attempt, and almost one million (35%) were former smokers at the time of the survey. Of the 964,000 men using nicotine gum, about 323,000 (34%) became former smokers. Of the 98,000 men who used the nicotine inhaler, 27,000 quit successfully (28%). None of the estimated 14,000 men who tried the nicotine nasal spray became former smokers.Forty-two percent of switchers also reported quitting smoking all at once, which was higher than among former smokers who used medications (8–19%). Although 40% of switchers quit smoking less than 5 years before the survey, 21% quit over 20 years earlier. Forty-six percent of switchers were current ST users at the time of the survey.ConclusionSwitching to ST compares very favorably with pharmaceutical nicotine as a quit-smoking aid among American men, despite the fact that few smokers know that the switch provides almost all of the health benefits of complete tobacco abstinence. The results of this study show that tobacco harm reduction is a viable cessation option for American smokers.

Collaboration


Dive into the Brad Rodu's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Philip A. Cole

Brigham and Women's Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ken Tilashalski

University of Alabama at Birmingham

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kevin McAdam

British American Tobacco

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nadarajah Vigneswaran

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Colleen Beall

University of Alabama at Birmingham

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge