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Report: Fewer People Dying of Cancer
Reported August 14, 2009
(Ivanhoe Newswire) – The number of
cancer deaths has declined steadily in the last three decades. Although
younger people have experienced the steepest declines, all age groups have
shown improvement, according to a recent report.
"Our efforts against cancer, including
prevention, early detection and better treatment, have resulted in profound
gains, but these gains are often unappreciated by the public due to the way
the data are usually reported," Eric Kort, M.D., who completed the study
while employed as a research scientist at the Van Andel Research Institute
in Grand Rapids, Michigan was quoted as saying.
Researchers found that for individuals born
since 1925, every age group has experienced a decline in cancer mortality.
The youngest age groups have experienced the steepest decline at 25.9
percent per decade, but even the oldest groups have experienced a 6.8
percent per decade decline.
The public often hears about incidence rates,
which continue to rise across many cancer types, or mortality proportions,
with the World Health Organization's (WHO) assertion that death from cancer
will surpass death from heart disease by 2010. Both these calculations are
accurate, Kort said, but they ask the wrong question. In particular, the
often-quoted WHO statistic can be misleading.
According to Richard Severson, Ph.D., a cancer
epidemiologist and associate chair of the Department of Family Medicine and
Public Health Sciences at Wayne State University, who reviewed the report
for Cancer Research, proportional mortality is calculated in groups of 100.
"When calculating proportional mortality, we start with the assumption that
everyone dies of something eventually, so you take 100 deaths and calculate,
based on death certificates, what those people have died from," Severson was
quoted as saying.
Cancer will surpass heart disease as a cause
of death in 2010 because, while both heart disease and cancer have been
declining, heart disease mortality rates have been declining more rapidly.
And while it's true that cancer incidence rates continue to grow, the
decreased mortality across all age groups shows the effect of improved
screening and treatment.
"In childhood cancer particularly,” said
Severson, “we're able to do amazing things with leukemia and lymphoma. That
used to be a death sentence, but now we are curing many of these cancers."
SOURCE: Cancer Research, August 13, 2009 |