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Growing threat

AFP – With nearly 10 million deaths and nearly 20 million new cases in 2022, cancer remains one of the world’s biggest killers, according to a report published last month by the World Health Organization (WHO).

Here are five key facts about the disease:

ONE IN FIVE PEOPLE

Cancer – a disease that causes abnormal cells to multiply and spread – affects humans and virtually all other animal species, with traces found in human skeletons dating from prehistoric times.

There are more than 100 types of cancer, each with its own diagnosis and treatment.

Around one in nine men and one in 12 women will die from cancer.

An estimated 9.74 million people died from cancer in 2022 and 19.96 million new cases were recorded, according to the report by the WHO’s International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC).

PHOTO: ENVATO

On average, one person in five will develop some form of cancer in their lifetime, with the number of global cases growing by over 25 per cent between 2009 and 2019, according to the United States-based Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation.

The IARC predicted the number of new cases of cancer recorded in the year 2040 would be 50 per cent higher than the 19.96 million recorded in 2022.

In 2050, the number is predicted to be 77 per cent higher than in 2022.

“There is a large increase in the cancer burden,” said IARC Cancer Surveillance Unit Head Dr Freddie Bray.

LUNG, BREAST AND COLON MOST COMMON

The three most common cancers are lung cancer (12.4 per cent of new cases in 2022), breast cancer (11.6 per cent) and colon cancer (9.6 per cent).

In terms of deaths, lung cancer is by far the deadliest, accounting for 18.7 per cent of deaths, ahead of colon cancer (9.3 per cent), liver cancer (7.8 per cent) and breast cancer (6.9 per cent).

DISPROPORTIONATELY HIT

Around half of the new cases in 2022 were in Asia, which is home to more than half the world’s population.

What is more surprising is that Europe, including Russia, accounted for a quarter of all the new cases, although it represents under 10 per cent of Earth’s inhabitants.

“Many countries in Europe have among the highest incidence rates of common cancers worldwide, such as prostate and female breast,” said Dr Bray.

By contrast, fewer than six per cent of cancer cases in 2022 were in Africa – home to one in five people, but which has the youngest population in the world.

Africa’s youthfulness can explain the low prevalence of many types of cancer, apart from cervical cancer, which is particularly prevalent in sub-Saharan Africa.

Three-quarters of all the new cancer cases in 2022 were among people aged over 55.

Under-29s accounted for fewer than three per cent of the cases, despite accounting for nearly half the world’s population.

AGE A BIG FACTOR

The risk of cancer rises steeply as people age because cells in the body become damaged over time and start to behave differently, leading in some cases to cancer.

Some of the damage happens by chance, but some is caused by external factors such as drinking, smoking and exposure to ultraviolet (UV) radiation.

MEN MORE AT RISK

Cancer kills more men than women, with men accounting for 56 out of every 100 cancer deaths, compared to 44 for women.

The fact that men are bigger smokers, which makes them more at risk of lung cancer – the deadliest of all cancer types – is chiefly blamed for the disparity. “But women endure almost the same burden of cancer overall and disproportionately so at younger ages,” said Dr Bray.

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