One-Third of Cancer Deaths Could Be Avoided
Copyright 2005 Daily News Central
Of the seven million worldwide cancer deaths reported in 2001,
35 percent were attributable to nine well-known behavioral and
environmental risk factors, according to an analysis published
in The Lancet.
Researchers from the Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) and
a network of collaborators made the calculation by estimating
mortality for 12 types of cancer linked to the nine risk factors
in seven World Bank regions for that year.
They also looked at how the risks, and the cancers they cause,
were distributed over the regions of the world. This is the
first assessment of the role of health risks in cancer deaths
globally and regionally.
Risk Factor Analysis
The researchers analyzed data from the Comparative Risk
Assessment project and World Health Organization databases to
determine the level of risk factors in different world regions,
and separately for men and women.
They also considered how hazardous each risk factor might be.
The analysis covered all high-income countries together, and
separated low-income and middle-income countries into
geographical regions: East Asia and Pacific, South Asia, Europe
and Central Asia, Latin America and Caribbean, Middle East and
North Africa, and Sub-Saharan Africa.
The nine risk factors:
- overweight and obesity - low fruit and vegetable intake -
physical inactivity - smoking - alcohol use - unsafe sex - urban
air pollution - indoor smoke from household use of coal -
contaminated injections in healthcare settings
Alcohol, Smoking Play Large Roles
More than one in every three of the seven million deaths from
cancer worldwide were caused by these nine potentially
modifiable risk factors (2.43 million), the researchers found,
with alcohol and smoking playing large roles in all income
levels and regions.
Worldwide, the nine risk factors caused 1.6 million cancer
deaths among men and 830,000 among women. Smoking alone is
estimated to have caused 21 percent of deaths from cancer
worldwide.
In high-income countries, these nine risks caused 760,000 cancer
deaths. Smoking, alcohol, and overweight and obesity were the
most important causes of cancer in these nations.
In low- and middle-income regions, the nine risks caused 1.67
million cancer deaths. Smoking, alcohol consumption, and low
fruit and vegetable intake were the leading risk factors for
these deaths.
Sexual transmission of human papillomavirus is the leading risk
factor for cervical cancer in women in low- and middle-income
countries, particularly in Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia,
where access to cervical screening is also limited.
Among low- and middle-income regions, Europe and Central Asia
had the highest proportion of death from cancer from the nine
risk factors studied; 39 percent of 825,000 cancer deaths in the
low- and middle-income countries of Europe and Central Asia were
caused by these risks.
The effects were even larger among men; one half of cancer
deaths among men in the low- and middle-income countries of
Europe and Central Asia were caused by these nine risks.
Behaviors and Environments
"These results clearly show that many globally important types
of cancer are preventable by changes in lifestyle behaviors and
environmental interventions," comments Majid Ezzati, senior
author of the study and assistant professor of international
health at HSPH.
"To win the war against cancer, we must focus not just on
advances in biomedical technologies, but also on technologies
and policies that change the behaviors and environments that
cause those cancers," he adds.
The study, "Causes of cancer in the world: comparative risk
assessment of nine behavioral and environmental risk factors,"
was funded by the National Institute on Aging and by the Disease
Control Priorities Project.