PARIS: Largely preventable or treatable infections
with viruses, bacteria and parasites cause about two million new cancer cases
and 1.5 million cancer deaths each year, said a study published Wednesday.
This
amounted to about one in six of the 12.7 million new cancer cases reported in
2008, said the report in The Lancet Oncology journal.
"Application
of existing public health methods for infection prevention, such as
vaccination, safer injection practice or antimicrobial treatments, could have a
substantial effect on the future burden of cancer worldwide," said the
report by the International Agency for Research on Cancer in Lyon, France.
Four
infections, hepatitis B and C, human papillomavirus (HPV) and the Helicobacter
pylori stomach bacteria, accounted for the bulk of the cases, some 1.9 million
-- mostly gastric, liver and cervical cancers.
Infection-related
cancers accounted for 3.3 per cent of new cases in Australia and New Zealand,
but 32.7 per cent in sub-Saharan Africa, said the report, based on a study of
27 cancer types in 184 countries.
Cervical
cancer accounted for half the infection-related cancers in women, and liver and
gastric cancers for 80 percent of cases in men.
"Around
30 per cent of infection-attributable cases occur in people younger than 50
years," said the report.
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AFP/fa
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