WHO report: alarming increase in cancer rates

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2003/apr2003/canc-a26.shtml

By Joanne Laurier
26 April 2003

Global cancer rates are expected to increase 50 percent by the year 2020,
according to the latest report from the International Agency for Research on
Cancer (IARC), a branch of the World Health Organization (WHO). The 351-page
study, titled World Cancer Report, begins by explaining that 10 million people
developed malignant tumors and 6.2 million died from the disease in the year
2000.
[URL's added by Han]
http://bookorders.who.int:8080/newaccess/anglais/detart1.jsp?codlan=1&codcol=76&codcch=0016
or
http://makeashorterlink.com/?O21022CC4

Cancer was responsible for 12 percent of the nearly 56 million deaths worldwide
from all causes in 2000. In industrialized countries more than one in four
people will die from the disease, a rate more than twice as high as developing
countries. Over 22 million people in the world were treated for cancer in 2000,
representing an increase of approximately 19 percent in incidence (cases) and 18
percent in mortality since 1990.

The report notes that the most common cancers worldwide, excluding non-melanoma
skin cancers, are cancers of the lung, breast and colorectal tissue. The cancers
which cause the greatest proportion of deaths are those of the lung, stomach and
liver, because the relative success of early intervention in breast and
colorectal cancers.

Investigations into cancer causation have revealed, according to the WHO report,
that the most important human carcinogens include tobacco, asbestos, aflatoxins
and ultraviolet light. In addition, nearly 20 percent of cancers are associated
with chronic infections, the most significant ones being hepatitis B and C
viruses (liver cancer), human papilloma viruses (cervival and ano-genital
cancers) and Helicobacter pylori (stomach cancer). In developed countries
chronic infection causation amounts to only 8 percent of all malignancies,
whereas in developing countries up to 25 percent of tumors are associated with
chronic infections.


Cancer and industrialization

The WHO's press release announcing its cancer report contains a section entitled
"Poverty, affluence and the global burden of cancer." It notes that while those
who live in industrialized countries are twice as likely to be diagnosed with
cancer than those living in developing countries, the death rates are shifted in
the reverse direction, with 50 percent of cancer patients dying in rich
countries, while 80 percent of victims die of the disease in poor countries.

More than half of today's cancer patients live in developing countries.
According to Paul Kleihues, MD, Director of IARC and co-editor of the World
Cancer Report, "Cancer has emerged as a major public health problem in
developing countries for the first time, matching its effect in industrialized
nations. This is a global problem, and it's growing."

Industrialized countries with the highest overall cancer rates are: the US,
Italy, Australia, Germany, The Netherlands, Canada and France.

Although industrialization is suggested to be a major factor in the prevalence
of cancer, the report reveals that the majority of investigative studies on
occupational exposures and the risk of cancer were published between 1950 and
1975, adding that few occupational carcinogens have been identified in the last
25 years. This is a reflection of the shift to the right in social policy in all
the major industrialized countries, as well as the complete prostration of the
official labor movements, which have abandoned workers to being the guinea pigs
for industrial poisoning.

The fact that there has been an admittedly decreased interest in studying
exposure to occupational carcinogens is itself a condemnation of the attitude of
governments and corporations to the safety and well-being of workers. This,
despite the fact that the World Cancer Report's foreword states that one of the
main reasons "for the greater cancer burden of affluent societies" is "the
earlier exposure to occupational carcinogens."


The role of the environment

The section on environmental pollution -- that is, contaminants of air, water
and soil -- is meager, containing an estimate that pollution accounts for only
1-4 percent of all cancers. A brief reference to the destruction of the ozone
layer by chlorofluorocarbons, which has greatly enhanced the risk of skin cancer
through increased ultraviolet radiation, appears in the summary of that section.
The study finds that "[t]he evidence for an increased risk of cancers other than
lung cancer from outdoor air pollution is inconclusive at present."

Further, although the environment may be polluted by a range of toxic organic
compounds that may accumulate in the body's fatty tissue, in most cases, these
compounds are only recognized as a carcinogenic hazard to humans when small
clusters of people have been heavily subjected to either occupational exposures
or exposures resulting from industrial breakdowns or malfunctions. Therefore,
concludes the report, "the hazard posed to the general population can only be
determined on the basis of extrapolation using mathematical models." In other
words, there is no way of concretely measuring to what extent environmental
pollution is responsible for the increased cancer rates within the general
population. Concomitantly, the study finds that "[t]he burden of cancer
attributable to food contaminants is difficult to quantify."

Sources of electromagnetic fields, such as equipment using electricity,
television, radio, computers, mobile telephones, microwave ovens as well as
radars and equipment used in industry have seen an unprecedented increase, but
the carcinogenicity of these fields is not clear, according the study. However,
exposure to ionizing radiation, such as medical X-rays and occupational
exposures, particularly in the medical and nuclear industries, can cause a
variety of neoplasms, including leukemia, breast cancer and thyroid cancer.

Such a low risk factor ascribed to environmental contamination seems incongruous
with the reports conclusion that only about 5 percent of all cancers can be
attributed to genetic susceptibility, and that even this susceptibility may
itself be a product of "environmental insults." The section called
"Gene-environment interactions" concludes: "It is hoped that a more unified
approach to cancer epidemiology and genetics will identify those combinations of
genetic susceptibility and environmental exposures that lead to significant
increases in risk at the individual and population level."

Epidemiologist and Carnegie-Mellon University Professor Dr. Devra Lee Davis
summed up for the WSWS her views on the WHO report: "WHO has done a good job of
identifying those things individuals can try to control that are tied in with
their risk of developing cancer, such as smoking and poor diet. No matter how
diligent people may be in addressing these hazards, many of the proven and
suspected causes of cancer, such as those tied in with where we live and work,
can only be addressed through public and private policies to identify these
risks, and keep them out of our homes, schools, gardens, and factories."

Interestingly, the study does assert that hormone replacement therapy is
associated with an increased risk of breast and endometrial cancers and that
certain anti-cancer drugs, such as Tamoxifen -- an estrogen-blocker commonly
used to treat breast cancer patients -- may cause secondary cancers. Surgical
implants used for both therapeutic and cosmetic purposes may also cause cancer.
"There have been more than 60 published case reports of sarcomas and other kinds
of cancers that have developed in humans at the sites of surgical implants or
other foreign bodies. However, there are no controlled studies that would allow
a conclusion that these cancers were indeed caused by the pre-existing foreign
body," says the study.

Another area discussed in the WHO report is the relationship of increasing life
expectancy and population aging to cancer. Globally, life expectancy has
increased from 45 years in 1950 to 66 years in 2000, but the population of the
world is aging rapidly -- the median age will have risen from 23.5 years in 1950
to 36.5 years in 2050. By 2050, more than 20 percent of the population will be
60 years and over, versus 10 percent in 2000. By comparison, the number of
cancer deaths increased by 35 percent during the period 1985-1997. The report
states that "[w]hile extending life expectancy is desirable in itself, it is
equally important that increased expectancy is accompanied by freedom from any
prospect of years of suffering as a consequence of chronic diseases, pain or
disability."


Social and public health issues

After stressing that cancer levels can be greatly reduced by individual choices,
such as cigarette smoking cessation, a healthier diet and lifestyle, and safe
sex, the report concludes by touching on some important social issues.

"The increasing magnitude of noncommunicable diseases, including cancer,
represents one of the major health challenges to global development in the new
century.... Medical knowledge is now sufficiently advanced to permit the
prevention of at least one-third of all cancers, the cure of a further
one-third, given early diagnosis and the administration of effective therapy,
and the adequate control of pain and other symptoms, with palliative care for
the remainder," states the section: "Cancer Control: A Global Outlook."

In order to accomplish this, the report argues that "a country must be prepared
to allocate a certain priority to cancer control activities, and possess a basic
public health and health care infrastructure." This advice runs counter to the
current trend of governments attacking or even dismantling health care
infrastructures. At the United Nations Global Ministerial Environment Forum in
February 2003, a very bleak picture of global infrastructure was presented.
Clean water and adequate sanitation facilities, "imperative for human health,"
are lacking for billions of people. In 2000, 1.1 billion did not have access to
an adequate water supply and 2.4 billion lacked access to improved sanitation.
Some two-thirds of the world's population will likely face "water stress" by
2025.

The WHO study admits that cancer is "a problem that cuts across national
boundaries, cultures, societies and socioeconomic strata." It points out that a
new approach is necessary for global cancer control. But that such an effort is
now hampered by an existing situation, in which "globally, cancer control
activities are fragmented, uncoordinated and often categorized and funded by
cancer type."

Expanding on this theme, the report continues: "[The] development of a Programme
following an internationally accepted framework results in an understanding of
the broader issues by both health care professionals and the general public. Of
particular importance in many countries are avoiding the misuses of available
resources, both public and personal, and an ethical obligation to relieve
suffering at reasonable costs." In today's world, this prescription is
essentially chimerical. The report goes on to say that "potential barriers to
such an approach include competing interests that could prevent the resources
intended for cancer control being allocated for this purpose." The culpability
of the top echelons of society for the cancer epidemic is only alluded to in the
report's summation.

While the World Cancer Report contains a massive compilation of very valuable
information, its perspective is focused on the individual rather than the
societal responsibility for the global cancer "burden": "Current smoking levels
and the adoption of unhealthy lifestyles, together with a steadily increasing
proportion of elderly people in the world, will result in a doubling of new
cancer cases, from 10 million worldwide in 2000 to 20 million in 2020, with an
annual death toll then reaching 12 million."

In her 1997 book, Living Downstream: An Ecologist Looks at Cancer and the
Environment, biologist Sandra Steingraber writes: "A narrow focus on
lifestyle -- like a narrow focus on genetic mechanisms -- obscures cancer's
environmental roots. It presumes that the ongoing contamination of our air, food
and water is an immutable fact of the human condition to which we must
accommodate ourselves" (emphasis added).

Unfortunately, the authors of the WHO report adapt themselves to an atmosphere
that accepts that nothing can be done to change the social framework that
threatens a health catastrophe of enormous proportions.
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Whom can we trust, the collective human conscience or self-serving elitists?

==================================================

WHO does have an interesting set of recently published books.
http://bookorders.who.int:8080/newaccess/anglais/newpublications1.jsp

A matter of time and money! So I just have to settle visiting the site once
in a while http://www.who.int/en/

Cheers!
--
Han Tacoma

~ Artificial Intelligence is better than none! ~


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