Rising tobacco use and poverty will fuel cancer across the developing world, more than doubling the number of new cases to 27 million by 2050, experts predicted on Thursday.
Cancer is already the No. 2 cause of death globally, after heart disease and ahead of AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis and other causes. And as people live longer and adopt bad habits such as smoking, cancer cases will rise, said Dr. Nancy Davidson of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.
“It accounts for 10 percent of deaths,” said Davidson, who is president of the American Society of Clinical Oncology. She cited this week’s report by the International Agency for Research on Cancer that 7.6 million people will die of cancer this year, 5 million of them in developing countries.
The statistics contradict a perception that cancer is a disease of rich nations. Cancer deaths have fallen in the United States, dropping by more than 2 percent between 2002 and 2004. “There will be 12 million new cancer cases diagnosed worldwide in 2007.
By 2050, this number will more than double to 27 million, even if the rates don’t change,” Dr. Lynn Ries of the U.S. National Cancer Institute said in a telephone briefing. Of these, 5.4 million cases will be in economically developed countries and 6.7 million in developing countries, Ries said. Cancer is caused by a mix of factors, including genes, diet, lack of exercise and, rarely, chemical exposure. But the No. 1 cause is smoking.
Read more.
December 20th, 2007 at 10:13 pm
Medical professional must try to get their patients to quit smoking at every opportunity. The costs caused by tobacco to all societies are overwhelming.
December 20th, 2007 at 10:20 pm
It definitely is harder to quit smoking than drinking, or any other drug.