Six lifestyle factors account for 50% of cases
Cancer is a scourge to society.
Strides have been made in treating the disease but global statistics paint a grim picture.
In 2022 (the latest year for which data is available), there were an estimated 20 million new cancer cases and 9.7 million deaths.
There are reasons to be hopeful, however. You can modify your risk of the deadly disease by overhauling your lifestyle.
A new study hammers this point home, revealing six lifestyle factors that account for four in 10 cancer cases and about one-half of all cancer deaths in adults 30 years old and older.
The study of Americans, published in the journal CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, found modifiable risk factors, including cigarette smoking, excess body weight, alcohol consumption, physical inactivity, diet, and infections, accounted for 713,340 cancer cases and 262,120 cancer deaths in 2019.
Cigarette smoking was by far the leading risk factor, contributing to nearly 20 percent of all cancer cases and 30 percent of all cancer deaths.
Cigarette smoking was by far the leading risk factor, contributing to nearly 20 percent of all cancer cases
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It comes days after an analysis by Cancer Research UK finds cancers caused by smoking have reached an all-time high of 160 new cases per day in the UK.
“Despite considerable declines in smoking prevalence during the past few decades, the number of lung cancer deaths attributable to cigarette smoking in the United States is alarming. This finding underscores the importance of implementing comprehensive tobacco control policies in each state to promote smoking cessation, as well as heightened efforts to increase screening for early detection of lung cancer, when treatment could be more effective,” said Doctor Farhad Islami, senior scientific director, cancer disparity research at the American Cancer Society and lead author of the latest report.
“Interventions to help maintain healthy body weight and diet can also substantially reduce the number of cancer cases and deaths in the country, especially given the increasing incidence of several cancer types associated with excess body weight, particularly in younger individuals.”
How the researchers arrived at their conclusion
In this study, researchers used nationally representative data on cancer incidence and mortality and risk factor prevalence to estimate the proportion and number of cancer cases and deaths attributable to potentially modifiable risk factors overall (excluding non-melanoma skin cancers) and for 30 cancer types.
These risk factors included cigarette smoking (current and former smoking); secondhand smoke; excess body weight; alcohol consumption; consumption of red and processed meat; low consumption of fruits and vegetables, dietary fibre, and dietary calcium; physical inactivity; ultraviolet (UV) radiation; and infection with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), Helicobacter pylori, hepatitis B virus (HBV), hepatitis C virus (HCV), human herpes virus-8 (HHV-8; also called Kaposi sarcoma herpesvirus), human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), and human papillomavirus (HPV).
The results showed cigarette smoking had the largest population attributable fraction (PAF) or proportion of cancer cases attributable to risk factors in the population (344,070 cases; 19.3 percent of all cases), contributing to 56.0 percent of all potentially preventable cancers in men (206,550 of 368,600) and 39.9 percent in women (137,520 of 344,740). Excess body weight had the second largest PAF (7.6 percent), followed by alcohol consumption (5.4 percent), UV radiation exposure (4.6 percent), and physical inactivity (3.1 percent).
By cancer type, the proportion of cases caused by potentially modifiable risk factors ranged from 100 percent for cervical cancer and Kaposi sarcoma – a rare type of cancer that affects the skin and mouth – to 4.9 percent for ovarian cancer and exceeded 50 percent for 19 of 30 evaluated cancer types.
In addition to cervical cancer and Kaposi sarcoma, more than 80 percent of all melanomas of the skin (92.2 percent) and cancers of the anus (94.2 percent), larynx (89.9 percent), lung and bronchus (lung; 88.2 percent), pharynx (87.4 percent), trachea (85 percent), oesophagus (85.4 percent), and oral cavity (83.7 percent) were attributable to evaluated risk factors. Lung cancer had the largest number of cases attributable to evaluated risk factors in both men (104,410 cases) and women (97,250), followed by skin melanoma (50,570), colorectal cancer (44,310), and urinary bladder cancer (32,000) in men and by breast (83,840), corpus uteri (35,790), and colorectal (34,130) cancer in women.
Consumption of red and processed meat was highlighted as a risk factor
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“These findings show there is a continued need to increase equitable access to preventive health care and awareness about preventive measures. Effective vaccines are available for hepatitis B virus, that causes liver cancer and HPV, which can cause several cancer types, including cervical, other anogenital, and oropharyngeal cancers,” added Doctor Ahmedin Jemal, senior vice president, surveillance and health equity science at the American Cancer Society and senior author of the study.
“Vaccination at the recommended time can substantially reduce the risk of chronic infection, and consequently, cancers associated with these viruses. HPV vaccination uptake in the United States is suboptimal.”
The second defence against cancer is to spot the signs of it.
According to the NHS, symptoms that need to be checked by a doctor include:
- A lump that suddenly appears on your body
- Unexplained bleeding
- Changes to your bowel habits
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