Eastern Eye (UK)

Massive study finds smoking still tops cancer-risk table

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NEARLY half of cancers worldwide can be traced back to a known risk factor, primarily tobacco or alcohol, a huge global study found last Friday (19), which said that behavioura­l changes can help reduce the threat of disease.

The study – published in The Lancet and conducted as part of a vast research programme funded by the Bill Gates Foundation – concluded that 44.4 per cent of cancer deaths worldwide were attributab­le to a known risk factor.

The Global Burden of Disease Study is a comprehens­ive regional and global research programme involving thousands of researcher­s from most countries across the world.

The study analysed the impact of 34 risk factors and confirmed what is already widely known – that tobacco is by far the biggest contributo­ry factor to cancer, accounting for 33.9 per cent of cases, followed by alcohol with 7.4 per cent.

It found over half of all male cancer deaths were attributab­le to such risk factors, and over a third of female deaths. And since “the leading risk factors contributi­ng to global cancer burden in 2019 were behavioura­l... reducing exposure to these modifiable risk factors would decrease cancer mortality” worldwide, the study concluded.

That also meant greater emphasis should be placed on prevention.

“The burden of cancer remains an important public health challenge that is growing in magnitude around the world,” said Christophe­r Murray, director of the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington’s School of Medicine and a co-senior author of the study.

“Smoking continues to be the leading risk factor for cancer globally, with other substantia­l contributo­rs to cancer burden varying.”

However, around half of cancers are not attributab­le to a known risk factor, meaning early diagnosis and effective treatments must accompany efforts to raise prevention efforts, the study found.

 ?? ?? RISK FACTOR: Tobacco
RISK FACTOR: Tobacco

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