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Lung
Cancer Leads Global
Cancer Statistics List
Excerpt from Reuters Health
NEW
YORK (Reuters Health) - There were 10 million new cases of cancer
in the world in the year 2000, 6 million deaths and approximately
22 million people living with cancer worldwide, according to a
new report on global cancer statistics.
Lung cancer
heads the list as the most common type of cancer in terms of new
cases (1.2 million, accounting for 12.3% of the world total) and
deaths (1.1 million, or 17.8% of the world total).
After lung
cancer, the most common types of new cancer cases were breast,
colorectal, stomach and liver.
The report,
by Dr. D. Maxwell Parkin of the International Agency for Research
on Cancer in Lyon, France, is published in the September issue
of The Lancet Oncology.
Parkin predicts
that stomach cancer rates, which are decreasing, will continue
to do so. However, he points out that the increasing risk of prostate
and breast cancer ``is likely to be maintained for some time.''
He also notes
that while lung cancer in some nations has started to decrease,
the numbers are likely to be offset by rising rates in certain
eastern European countries and future increases in developing
nations.
Since the
largest changes in population growth and increasing age of populations
are expected to take place in developing countries as opposed
to developed nations, ``more and more of the future cancer burden
will be in these regions,'' according to Parkin.
For instance,
by 2020, projections suggest there will be as many as 9 million
new cases of cancer in developing nations, as opposed to 6 million
new cases in developed nations.
``These simple
projections,'' Parkin writes, ``illustrate the increasing toll
that cancer will take in our aging world populations, and highlight
the need to seek and apply effective preventative measures, as
well as to strive for continued improvements in the effectiveness
of treatment.''
SOURCE:
The Lancet Oncology 2001;2:533-543.
Reference
Source 89
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