感染是诱发癌症的最主要原因之一!
(2012-05-11 22:33:45)
标签:
保健癌症预防乙肝子宫颈癌乙肝疫苗胃癌幽门螺杆菌健康 |
分类: 健康贴士 |
谈及癌症,人们之表现其一是“谈癌变色”,二则大多数人包括有相当一部分医护人员都喜欢说“癌症的原因不明”。可事实上,实情并非如此,如今不少癌症不仅可以治愈,并且完全可以预防。这不,日前英国著名的医学杂志~柳叶刀肿瘤学分册(The Lancet Oncology)发表文章提示“世界上六分之一的癌症因感染所致,特别是胃、肝和子宫颈之恶性肿瘤更是如此,并且这些引起癌症的感染因素通常是可以预防和/或治疗的,如注射乙肝疫苗可以预防乙肝,进而预防肝癌,根治胃幽门螺旋菌感染可以预防胃癌等。”相信这也是为何世界癌症协会认为“癌症不仅可以治愈,亦可以预防”之依据。更多资讯,请参阅原文!
Infection Causes 1 in 6 Cancers Worldwide: Study
Stomach, liver and cervical malignancies top the list
WEDNESDAY, May 9 (HealthDay News) -- One in six cancers worldwide is caused by preventable or treatable infections, a new study finds.
Infections cause about 2 million
cancer cases a year, and 80 percent of those cases occur in less
developed areas of the world, according to the study, which was
published online May 8 in
"Infections with certain viruses, bacteria and parasites are one of the biggest and most preventable causes of cancer worldwide," lead authors Catherine de Martel and Martyn Plummer, from the International Agency for Research on Cancer in Lyon, France, said in a journal news release. "Application of existing public-health methods for infection prevention -- such as vaccination, safer injection practice or antimicrobial treatments -- could have a substantial effect on future burden of cancer worldwide."
The researchers examined data on 27 cancers in 184 countries and calculated that about 16 percent of all cancers in 2008 were infection-related. The rate of infection-related cancers was 23 percent in developing countries and 7 percent in developed countries.
Rates of infection-related cancers ranged from 3 percent in Australia and New Zealand to 33 percent in sub-Saharan Africa.
"Many infection-related cancers are
preventable, particularly those associated with human
papillomavirus (HPV),
In 2008, these four main infections together caused 1.9 million cancers, mostly of the stomach, liver and cervix. Cervical cancer accounted for about half of infection-related cancers in women, and liver and gastric cancers accounted for more than 80 percent of infection-related cancers in men.
The study findings "show the potential for preventive and therapeutic programs in less developed countries to significantly reduce the global burden of cancer and the vast disparities across regions and countries," Goodarz Danaei, of the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston, wrote in an accompanying editorial.
"Since effective and relatively low-cost vaccines for HPV and [hepatitis B] are available, increasing coverage should be a priority for health systems in high-burden countries," Danaei added.
SOURCE: