The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Multi-stakeholde­rs key to cancer control efforts

- TADAO KAKIZOE Special to The Yomiuri Shimbun Tadao Kakizoe is president of the Japan Cancer Society and a past president of the National Cancer Center.

While we are still uncertain about how soon the novel coronaviru­s pandemic will end, worrisome data has been released. Japan’s National Cancer Center reported that the number of people in Japan who were newly diagnosed with and treated for cancer in 2020 decreased by about 60,000 from the previous year — a sharp year-on-year decline of nearly 5%.

e annual total of cases of new cancer diagnosis and treatment had been gradually increasing in the preceding years. erefore, it is hard to know why the number of new cancer patients suddenly shrank in 2020. COVID-19 infections seem to have forced the suspension of cancer screenings and caused people to regard seeing doctors as a “nonessenti­al, nonurgent” activity they therefore should refrain from.

Needless to say, the most important point in cancer medicine is early diagnosis and treatment. As a person who has fully devoted himself to seeking to eradicate cancer, I cannot overlook the fact that so many people missed opportunit­ies for early diagnosis and treatment.

e coronaviru­s pandemic continues shaking the fundamenta­ls of the cancer medicine system — which has been built up through decade upon decade of assiduous e orts — to the extent that cancer patients’ lives are being threatened.

Now is the time for me to rea rm what the e orts toward cancer eradicatio­n have achieved to date and bring fresh thinking to what should be done further in the future.

is year, Japan marks the 15th anniversar­y of implementi­ng the Cancer Control Law — an epoch-making developmen­t in which cancer patients’ voices seeking better treatment nally had politics act in their favor.

With the enforcemen­t of the basic law for cancer control in April 2007, the government launched a council on the Basic Plan to Promote Cancer Control Programs.

BASIC LAW PROMPTS PROGRESS

e basic law stipulates that the council includes members representi­ng cancer patients, their families or bereaved ones. If the past practice had been adhered to, the council would have been comprised only of cancer medicine specialist­s and similar experts. When the council held its inaugural meeting in April 2007, four of its 18 members represente­d cancer patients, their families and bereaved ones.

e council worked on rst-phase basic programs, covering the period from

scal 2007 to scal 2011. e council’s secretaria­t proposed that it should aim to improve the quality of life (QOL) for all cancer patients.

In response, the members representi­ng cancer patients’ families and bereaved ones said: “Patients have hard

times, of course, but their family members have equally hard or even harder times. So we want [measures for] QOL improvemen­t to cover families as well.” As a result, the council unanimousl­y changed the proposal to aim to “improve the QOL for cancer patients and their families.”

en, the purpose of Japan’s cancer medicine was set to create a system in which medical sta , among others, would focus on supporting both cancer patients and their families.

is was a signi cant step forward.

e basic programs included a goal of reducing the death rate from cancer by 20% over a 10year period and plans to designate core hospitals for cancer treatment. e cancer mortality rate consequent­ly decreased by 16% with the ve-year survival rate among patients improving.

ere is no doubt that Japan’s cancer control has made great progress thanks to the legislatio­n.

Levels of medicine availabili­ty change as time goes by. e Basic Plan to Promote Cancer Control Programs, which is the country’s overall strategy for cancer control, has so far been revised twice.

When the second-phase basic programs were adopted for scal 2012-16, the relevant measures were quite elaborate, re ecting opinions of cancer patients and their families.

ose measures, for example, included one to facilitate employment of cancer patients.

While it is excellent news that advances in medicine have extended the survival rate of cancer patients, such improvemen­t is associated with a new challenge — an increase in the number of cancer patients with no job opportunit­ies.

A health ministry research team found that, of those employees diagnosed with cancer, 30% tendered letters of resignatio­n while 4% were dismissed.

e basic plan then incorporat­ed a new policy designed to ensure that workplaces have a correct understand­ing about cancer and set up a system to provide relevant consultati­on services.

Even today, cancer patients have trouble continuing employment while receiving treatment.

e basic plan must strengthen and improve the existing measures further to help such patients.

e ongoing third phase of the basic plan, covering scal 2017-22, includes measures for adolescent and young adult (AYA) cancer patients, ages 15 to 39, for the rst time.

Cancer tends to be considered a disease a ecting middle-aged and older people. Little attention seems to be paid to cancer patients in the AYA generation, as they exist between the older and younger ones.

AYA cancer patients are at a sensitive age or at major turning points in their life, ranging from going on to the next stage of education to nding employment, marrying and having children. As such, they are apt to feel mentally unstable. In the earlier years a er the basic law was implemente­d, more than a few AYA cancer patients were unable to receive adequate care, as no system was in place yet to provide organized support to them.

Against this background, the current phase of the basic plan requires the state to be responsibl­e for introducin­g a system dedicated to giving medical and employment support to cancer patients in the AYA generation. Cancer is a disease that must be eradicated as it a ects people regardless of age or sex.

MEASURES IN FOREIGN COUNTRIES

Now, let’s look at related measures taken in foreign countries. In the United States, then President Richard Nixon signed into law the National Cancer Act of 1971. For 50 years now, various sectors in the United States have steadily promoted measures against smoking, enhanced cancer screening, emphasized the importance of cancer research, advanced cancer care and spread palliative care services, among other e orts.

In 2016, then U.S. Vice President Joe Biden, the current president, led the Cancer Moonshot e ort a er losing his eldest son to brain cancer. en President Barack Obama, gaining the cooperatio­n of the National Cancer Institute of the United States, called for genomic science to be applied to cancer research and treatment to make the U.S. capable of curing cancer. In recent years, the death rate from cancer in the United States has been on the decrease.

In Britain, a national comprehens­ive cancer plan was introduced in 2000. On many points, the British plan resembles Japan’s Basic Plan to Promote Cancer Control Programs. Britain carried out a rigorous interim review of cancer service improvemen­ts in 2005, giving positive evaluation­s in many categories. In 2007, a similar review emphasized the need for providing more e ective cancer services, including having patients stay in the hospital for shorter periods and improving cost-e ectiveness.

Japan’s cancer control strategy is comparable to those of the United States and Britain as it has been strongly implemente­d since the enactment of the Cancer Control Law.

Nonetheles­s, it should be noted that the third-phase basic plan has no explicit numerical target for reducing deaths from cancer. ere are some who point out that Japan has not performed a rigid interim review of the basic plan. is can be a point that should be taken into considerat­ion for improvemen­t in the process of working out the fourth-phase basic plan scheduled to begin in scal 2023.

Currently, the spread of COVID-19 continues to draw people’s attention at home and abroad to infectious diseases. A survey conducted by the Japan Cancer Society found that the number of people receiving cancer screening programs organized by local government­s in 2020 fell by a he y 30% from 2019. e contractio­n means that cancer likely has gone undetected in an estimated 2,100 people.

e adverse e ect of the sharp decrease in the number of people receiving cancer screening will become apparent from now on. In other words, we are in a situation where we may inevitably nd it too late to do anything to cure cancer in many people. I hope the government will improve the situation as soon as possible.

In 2012, the Union for Internatio­nal Cancer Control (UICC), which is the largest private-sector cancer control organizati­on in the world, called for multi-stakeholde­r partnershi­ps and participat­ion of a broad range of relevant profession­als as a prerequisi­te for cancer prevention and control. I think the same way.

We need to formulate a framework for multi-stakeholde­r partnershi­ps that will enable everyone — not only medical specialist­s and experts as well as cancer patients and their families, but also businesses and ordinary citizens — to take part in cancer control campaigns. (April 8)

I cannot overlook the fact that so many people missed opportunit­ies for early diagnosis and treatment

 ?? Yomiuri Shimbun file photo ?? Japan’s National Cancer Center Hospital is seen in Chuo Ward, Tokyo in May 2021.
Yomiuri Shimbun file photo Japan’s National Cancer Center Hospital is seen in Chuo Ward, Tokyo in May 2021.

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