Cancer now kills more than
heart disease
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(AP) -- For the first time, cancer has surpassed heart
disease as the top killer of Americans under 85, health
officials said Wednesday. The good news is that deaths
from both are falling, but improvement has been more
dramatic for heart disease. |
Wednesday, January 19, 2005
"It's dropping fast enough that another disease is eclipsing
it," said Dr. Walter Tsu, president of the American Public
Health Association.
The single biggest reason: fewer smokers.
The news is contained in the American Cancer Society's
annual statistical report, released Wednesday. In 2002, the
most recent year for which information is available, 476,009
Americans under 85 died of cancer compared with 450,637 who
died of heart disease.
That trend actually began in 1999, but "this is the first
time we've looked at this by age," said Ahmedin Jemal, a
cancer society epidemiologist and main author of the report.
Those under 85 comprise 98.4 percent of the population, said
Dr. Eric Feuer, chief of statistical research for the
National Cancer Institute who also worked on the report.
That means that only the very oldest Americans continue to
die of heart disease more than of cancer, a trend that is
expected to reverse by 2018, said Dr. Harmon Eyre, the
cancer society's longtime chief medical officer.
"This is a situation in which neither one of us wants to be
No. 1" because far more deaths could be prevented, said Dr.
Rose Marie Robertson, chief scientific officer of the
American Heart Association.
A third of all cancers are related to smoking, and another
third are related to obesity, poor diets and lack of
exercise -- all factors that also contribute to heart
disease.
"We want to send the message: Don't smoke, eat right,
exercise and maintain normal weight, and see your doctor for
normal checkups," Eyre said.
Smoking among adults fell dramatically between 1965 and
2000, from 42 percent to 22 percent. Federal goals are to
cut the rate to 12 percent by 2010.
Heart disease sufferers also have benefitted from better
surgical techniques and device and from better drugs to
treat heart problems and control contributing conditions
like high blood pressure, Eyre said.
Cancer death rates have declined about 1 percent per year
since 1999, thanks to earlier detection, prevention efforts
and better treatments, experts said.
Deaths from colon cancer and from lung cancer in men are
particularly striking.
"They're dropping so fast that they exceed the impact of
aging," which increases the likelihood of developing cancer,
Eyre said.
The drop in colon cancer is because of screening, which
finds and removes growths called polyps before they turn
cancerous. Still, about half of people for whom testing is
recommended don't get checked.
In women, cancer incidence has leveled off for the first
time after several years of rising.
"The lung cancer epidemic has peaked in women and we're
likely to see stabilization of rates or a decline from this
point on," said Dr. Elizabeth Ward, director of surveillance
research for the cancer society.
Other highlights:
· An estimated 1,372,910 new cancer cases and 570,260 cancer
deaths are expected this year. Five-year survival rates have
risen from 50 percent in the 1970s to 74 percent today.
· Lung cancer remains the biggest killer, projected to claim
163,510 lives this year.
· Some 232,090 men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer,
and it will kill 30,350.
· About 211,240 women will be diagnosed with breast cancer,
and it will kill 40,410.
The report also highlights cancers caused by germs -- 1.5
million cases or 26 percent of cases in developing
countries; and 360,000 cases or 7.3 percent of cancers in
developed countries like the United States.
These are mostly liver cancer, caused by the hepatitis B and
C viruses; cervical cancer, caused by human papillomavirus;
stomach cancer caused by the bacteria H. pylori; and
AIDS-related cancers caused by infection with HIV.
"Many of them are highly preventable," especially through
vaccines for hepatitis and a soon-anticipated vaccine for
papillomavirus, Ward said.
Tsou, of the public health association, said the task for
the future is clear: "We know a lot about how to treat
cancer but we need to know more about how to prevent the
disease in the first place."
The cancer society's Eyre agreed.
"In cardiovascular disease, there has been a better
recognition of preventable precursors," such as smoking,
high cholesterol, diabetes and high blood pressure, he said.
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