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Cancer Deaths Continue to Fall 2012-04-06
By Salynn Boyles

Obesity and inactivity are emerging as new public health threats in the fight against cancer.

Although a new CDC report shows that the overall cancer death rate dropped among adults and children in the United States, some of those cancers associated with obesity are on the rise.

The joint report from the CDC and some of the nation’s leading cancer groups marks the first time they have highlighted the relationship between obesity and cancer. A review of more than 7,000 studies supports a link between obesity and increased risk for colorectal and postmenopausal breast cancers, as well as cancers of the esophagus, kidney, pancreas, and uterus. Lack of physical activity was linked to increased risk for colon cancer and “probable” increased risk for postmenopausal breast and uterine cancers.

“Everybody knows obesity and inactivity can put people at risk for diabetes, heart disease, and many other chronic diseases, but for the most part people don’t know that they can cause cancer,” says Marcus Plescia, MD, MPH, who directs the Division of Cancer Prevention and Control at the CDC.

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Lung, Colon Cancer Rates Decline

The newly published report was a collaborative effort between the CDC, the National Cancer Institute, the American Cancer Society, and the North American Association of Central Cancer Registries, based on comprehensive, nationwide registry data on newly diagnosed cancers and cancer deaths.

It found that cancer death rates in the U.S. decreased, on average, by about 1.6% per year between 2004 and 2008, while cancer incidence rates dropped slightly among men and stabilized among women.

The overall downward trends reflect progress in prevention, screening, early detection, and the treatment of cancer.

Among the trends for some of the most common cancers:

    Lung cancer incidence and deaths continued to decline among men and women, largely because fewer people smoke. Lung cancer rates have dropped the most in states with the strongest tobacco cessation programs, the report noted.
    Breast cancer incidence rates have been relatively stable for the past decade, after steep declines in the early 2000s. The decreased use of hormone therapy by postmenopausal women was credited with this decline.
    Incidence and death rates for colorectal cancer continue to decline, largely due to more people using colonoscopy and other forms of screening.
    The prostate cancer death rate has decreased since the early 1990s, but the contribution of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) testing to this decline is not known, according to the report.
    The rate of childhood cancers has increased by 0.6% per year since the early 1990s, but the dramatic decline in cancer deaths that began in the mid 1970s continues.
    The death rate among children and teens dropped by 2.7% annually between 1975 and 1996, and continued to decline by 1.3% per year between 1996 and 2008.
    Cancer death rates have dropped for all ethnic groups, except American Indians and Alaskan Natives, since 1999.
 


 
 
 
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