可预防的癌症比例很高:需要制定更好的战略,如教育、政策和社区干预措施,以减少与癌症发病和死亡相关的可改变的风险因素。

IF 6.1 2区 医学 Q1 ONCOLOGY Cancer Pub Date : 2024-10-09 DOI:10.1002/cncr.35577
Mary Beth Nierengarten
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引用次数: 0

摘要

根据美国癌症协会(ACS)研究人员领导的一项研究,新的估计表明,在美国 30 岁或以上的成年人中,至少 40% 的癌症病例和近 50% 的癌症死亡病例可归因于潜在的可改变风险因素。1根据 2019 年 30 种癌症类型的全国代表性癌症发病率和死亡率数据,该研究发现,71.3 万多癌症病例和 26.2 万癌症死亡病例可归因于可改变因素。"该研究的主要作者、美国癌症协会癌症差异研究团队高级科学主任、医学博士法哈德-伊斯拉米(Farhad Islami)说:"我们已经知道,大量癌症病例和死亡病例可归因于潜在的可改变风险因素,但可归因于升高因素的癌症病例和死亡病例数量仍然惊人。该研究更新了之前基于2018年公布的2014年数据做出的估计。2可改变的风险因素包括吸烟(以前或现在吸烟,包括接触二手烟)、体重超标、饮酒、缺乏运动、饮食(食用红肉和加工肉类,水果、蔬菜、膳食纤维和膳食钙摄入量低)、膳食纤维和膳食钙)、紫外线辐射以及感染(Epstein-Barr 病毒、幽门螺杆菌、乙型肝炎病毒、丙型肝炎病毒 [HCV]、人类疱疹病毒 8、人类免疫缺陷病毒和人类乳头瘤病毒 [HPV])。与之前的估计结果一样,在因风险因素导致的癌症病例中,吸烟所占比例最大(19.3%),其次是体重超标(7.6%)、饮酒(5.4%)、紫外线辐射(4.6%)和缺乏运动(3.1%)。Islami博士指出,吸烟对癌症发病率和死亡率的影响一直很大,并表示这项研究 "清楚地表明 "有必要继续加强降低吸烟率的工作,特别是在低收入社区等人群中,因为这些人群没有从过去十年在降低吸烟率方面取得的重大进展中获益。加州旧金山加州大学旧金山分校海伦-迪勒家庭综合癌症中心流行病学和生物统计学教授、癌症控制项目联合负责人斯嘉丽-戈麦斯(Scarlett Gomez)博士也强调了这一必要性。她说:"虽然我们看到人群吸烟率有所下降,肺癌和其他烟草相关癌症的发病率也随之下降,但吸烟和二手烟暴露仍然是导致癌症发病和死亡的最大因素。"她说,这项研究凸显了降低吸烟等主要癌症风险因素在人群中的流行率所面临的挑战,她同意研究作者的观点,即需要采取多层次、多因素的干预方法,包括对患者进行教育,使其了解可改变的风险因素所带来的癌症风险。还需要采取政策和社区层面的干预措施,以解决患者生活、工作和娱乐环境中的问题,这些问题使得减少风险行为具有挑战性。伊斯拉米博士说:"个人行为选择通常发生在社区环境中。"因此,除了尝试在个人层面减少癌症风险因素的暴露外,还需要在地方、州和国家层面的公共、私人和社区组织的参与下,采取社区层面的干预措施,以大幅减少癌症风险因素的暴露。"例如,在吸烟问题上,医疗服务提供者可以提供戒烟措施方面的指导和帮助,如咨询和药物。Islamami博士指出,这些措施需要更加经济实惠,并让所有人都能获得。其他措施还包括烟草控制政策,如烟草税、无烟法律、警示标签、多媒体宣传和营销禁令等,旨在鼓励目前吸烟的人戒烟,并阻止不吸烟的人开始吸烟。他指出,在烟草控制政策中,美国通过消费税提高香烟价格的效果最为显著。戈麦斯博士指出,吸烟率下降最快的州是那些颁布了烟草政策(如税收和禁令)的州。
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High percentage of cancers potentially preventable

New estimates indicate that at least 40% of all cancer cases and nearly 50% of cancer deaths in adults aged 30 years or older in the United States can be attributed to potentially modifiable risk factors according to a study led by researchers at the American Cancer Society (ACS).1

Based on 2019 nationally representative data on cancer incidence and mortality for 30 cancer types, the study found that more than 713,000 cancer cases and 262,000 cancer deaths could be attributed to modifiable factors.

“We already knew that a substantial number of cancer cases and deaths can be attributed to potentially modifiable risk factors, but still the number of cancer cases and deaths attributable to elevated factors is staggering,” says the lead author of the study, Farhad Islami, MD, PhD, who is the senior scientific director for the Cancer Disparity Research team at ACS. The study updates previous estimates based on 2014 data published in 2018.2

Modifiable risk factors included cigarette smoking (former or current smoking, including exposure to secondhand smoke), excess body weight, alcohol consumption, physical inactivity, diet (consumption of red and processed meat and low consumption of fruits, vegetables, dietary fiber, and dietary calcium), exposure to ultraviolet radiation, and infections (Epstein–Barr virus, Helicobacter pylori, hepatitis B virus, hepatitis C virus [HCV], human herpes virus 8, human immunodeficiency virus, and human papillomavirus [HPV]).

As in prior estimates, cigarette smoking was associated with the largest proportion of cancer cases attributed to risk factors (19.3%), and it was followed by excess body weight (7.6%), alcohol consumption (5.4%), ultraviolet radiation exposure (4.6%), and physical inactivity (3.1%).

Cigarette smoking emerged again as a critical risk factor to address, as it contributed to 22.7% and 15.8% of all cancer cases in men and women, respectively, and to 56% and nearly 40% of potentially preventable cancers, respectively. Dr Islami points to the continual high impact of cigarette smoking on cancer incidence and mortality and states that the study “clearly shows” the need to continue and enhance efforts to reduce smoking rates, particularly in populations such as low-income communities that have not benefited as much from the substantial progress made over the past decade to reduce these rates.

Scarlett Gomez, MPH, PhD, professor of epidemiology and biostatistics and coleader of the Cancer Control Program at the UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center in San Francisco, California, also emphasizes this need. “While we have seen population-level prevalence of smoking decline, and consequent declines in lung and other tobacco-related cancers, smoking and secondhand smoke exposure still remain the largest contributors to cancer incidence and deaths.”

She says that the study highlights the challenge of reducing the population-level prevalence of major cancer risk factors such as smoking, and she agrees with the study authors on the need for a multilevel and multifactorial interventional approach that includes educating individual patients on the risks of cancer due to modifiable risk factors. Policy and community-level interventions also are needed to address the issues within the context in which patients live, work, and play that make it challenging to reduce risk behaviors.

A key takeaway from the study is the need to develop better strategies to reduce these risk factors associated with cancer incidence and death. Such strategies should include both education at the individual level and addressing the larger social and policy issues.

“Individual behavioral choices often occur within the context of the community,” says Dr Islami. “Therefore, in addition to attempts to reduce exposure to cancer risk factors at the individual level, community-level interventions with the engagement of public, private, and community organizations at local, state, and national levels are required to substantially reduce exposure to risk factors of cancer.”

How this may work in the case of smoking, for example, is for health care providers to offer guidance and help on smoking cessation measures, such as counseling and medications. Dr Islami notes that such measures need to be more affordable and accessible to all. Other measures can include tobacco control policies, such as tobacco taxation, smoke-free laws, warning labels, multimedia campaigns, and marketing bans, aimed at both encouraging current smoking individuals to quit and discouraging nonsmoking individuals from starting. He notes that among tobacco control policies, increasing the price of cigarettes through excise taxes has shown the strongest effect in the United States. Dr Gomez notes that the states with the sharpest declines in smoking rates are those that enacted tobacco policies, such as taxation and bans.

Increasing equitable access to preventive health care and awareness about prevention measures is also a critical part of a multifactorial strategy, Dr Islami says. He cites the recommendation by the US Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) to screen children and adolescents who are 6 years old or older for obesity and then to refer those children who could benefit for comprehensive, intensive behavioral interventions to promote a healthier body weight. He also cites the USPSTF’s recommendations for primary care providers to screen persons who are 18 years old or older for unhealthy alcohol use and to provide those engaged in risky or hazardous drinking with brief behavioral counseling interventions.

In addition, he points to the importance of educating patients (or parents of eligible children) on the recommendations for and benefits of HPV vaccination as well as HCV testing and treatment. HPV vaccination is particularly important, as cervical cancer is potentially 100% preventable with the vaccine.

Elena Martinez, MPH, PhD, the Sam M. Walton Endowed Chair for Cancer Research at the UC San Diego Moores Cancer Center and a professor in the Department of Family and Preventive Medicine at the Herbert Wertheim School of Public Health and Human Longevity Science in La Jolla, California, emphasizes the need to ensure that patients are up to date on vaccinations and underscores that all cancer prevention strategies will need to be specific to the risk factor profile of the individual patient given the unequal burden of cancer in low-income and minoritized communities.

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来源期刊
Cancer
Cancer 医学-肿瘤学
CiteScore
13.10
自引率
3.20%
发文量
480
审稿时长
2-3 weeks
期刊介绍: The CANCER site is a full-text, electronic implementation of CANCER, an Interdisciplinary International Journal of the American Cancer Society, and CANCER CYTOPATHOLOGY, a Journal of the American Cancer Society. CANCER publishes interdisciplinary oncologic information according to, but not limited to, the following disease sites and disciplines: blood/bone marrow; breast disease; endocrine disorders; epidemiology; gastrointestinal tract; genitourinary disease; gynecologic oncology; head and neck disease; hepatobiliary tract; integrated medicine; lung disease; medical oncology; neuro-oncology; pathology radiation oncology; translational research
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