Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Lifestyle

Overweight linked to 500,000 cancer cases per year

overwight fat man

Overweight and obesity is now causing nearly half a million new cancer cases in adults every year, roughly 3.6 percent of the world’s total, a study said Wednesday.

A quarter of these cases are “realistically avoidable,” said the authors of the work published in The Lancet Oncology.

Led by scientists at the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), the paper drew on a range of sources, including a large database of cancer incidence and mortality for 184 countries in 2012.

In men, being overweight was blamed for 136,000 new cases, more than two-thirds of them cancers of the colon and kidney.

In women, it was linked to 345,000 cancer diagnoses, nearly three-quarters of which were post-menopausal breast, endometrial and colon cancers.

Mirroring the spread of obesity in developed countries, the tally was highest in North America, which accounted for nearly a quarter of all the weight-related new cancer cases.

Sub-Saharan Africa had the fewest, with 7,300 cases.

“Our findings add support for a global effort to address the rising trends in obesity,” said lead researcher Melina Arnold.

“The global prevalence in adults has doubled since 1980. If this trend continues, it will certainly boost the future burden of cancer, particularly in South America and North Africa, where the largest increases in the rate of obesity have been seen over the last 30 years.”

Measured as a ratio of weight in kilogrammes-to-height in metres squared, a body mass index (BMI) of 25 to 29.9 is considered overweight, and 30 plus as obese.

Elsewhere in The Lancet, an updated map of cancer survival shed light on a persisting gulf between rich and poor countries, as well as within advanced economies themselves.

The CONCORD-2 study looked at a key benchmark — the rate for survival five years after diagnosis — among 25.7 million patients who had had one of 10 common cancers.

For acute lymphoblastic leukaemia in children — the most common childhood cancer — the rate ranged from 90 percent in Canada, Austria, Belgium, Germany and Norway, to just 16-50 percent in Jordan, Lesotho, central Tunisia, the Indonesian capital Jakarta and Mongolia.

In most developed countries as well as in Brazil, Colombia and Ecuador, the five-year survival from breast and colorectal cancers has increased, thanks to earlier diagnosis and better treatment.

There remains a major gap in the survival rate of cervical and ovarian cancer.

Five-year survival for these two types of cancer varies from more than 70 percent in Mauritius, South Korea, Taiwan, Iceland and Norway to less than 40 percent in Libya.

Within Europe, cervical and ovarian cancer survival is 60 percent or less in Britain, France, Ireland, Bulgaria, Latvia, Poland, Russia and Slovakia.

The study should be a barometer for national health policy, said Claudia Allemani at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

“In some countries, cancer is far more lethal than in others — in the 21st century, there should not be such a dramatic gulf in survival.”

AFP

(Visited 3 times, 1 visits today)
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Some More Sauce...

Entertainment

Following a string of hits including “Inside” with Savara, “Outside” that has dominated TikTok in Kenya, Afro-Pop dancehall muse Keemlyf returns with his final...

Entertainment

Rising independent Tanzanian artist Itaré steps into a new era of greatness with the release of his self-titled  debut EP, ‘Itaré’ — a bold artistic breakthrough...

Da Squeeze

For the past two years, Bien, Sauti Sol, and Wakadinali have been the flagbearers of Kenyan music, consistently appearing in Spotify’s Top 10 most-streamed...

Da Squeeze

TikTok is excited to unveil the musical powerhouses and creators bringing energy to the 2025 TikTok Awards Sub-Saharan Africa on 6th December. Guests, including...

Entertainment

Netflix have defended their documentary about Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs after the rapper branded it “a shameful hit piece”. The streaming service released Sean Combs:...

Entertainment

Rising Kenyan-born artist based in Amsterdam, Dunia Wamaitha (formerly known as Dunia), has released a new single “Have Some Fun (Not the One)” –...

Entertainment

John Legend had to “negotiate” with a porn producer to secure his stage name. The All of Me hitmaker had been performing under his...

Da Squeeze

Months before playing the Super Bowl Halftime show, Bad Bunny has made his mark on this year's Spotify Wrapped.