By Peter Montague
A white male of the baby boom generation is about twice as likely to get cancer as his grandfather was, and a white female of the same age has about a 50% greater chance of getting cancer than her grandmother did, according to a study published in February in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA).
The study is limited to white people. The historical data (1950-1989) are also limited to whites because data on non-whites from the 1950s and 1960s are considered unreliable. (Racial bias in the medical research community appears to explain the poor quality of historical cancer data for non-whites: until the 1970s, either the data were not collected at all or were not collected systematically enough to allow comparison with data for whites.)
The new JAMA study confirms for whites in the US what previous studies had shown for many industrialised countries: that the incidence rate for many cancers is increasing steadily even though the death rate for some cancers has been falling.
Incidence rates and death rates are calculated per 100,000 persons in the population, and they are standardised to the age of the population in a selected year (1970 is often the year selected) so that the data can be reliably compared from one year to the next despite changes in the ages of the population. This means that the rising rates reported in JAMA and elsewhere are not caused by the population simply growing older.
There are two cancers (stomach and cervix) for which both incidence and deaths are diminishing as time passes. This is the only really good news.
There are eight cancers for which the death rate is diminishing even as the incidence rate is rising: colon/rectum, ovaries, larynx, testicles, bladder, lymph (Hodgkin's), childhood cancers and leukemias. These eight are the cancers that people are "learning to live with" through advances in surgery, chemotherapy and radiation therapy. Survivors are often disfigured and debilitated by life-saving treatments.
There are six cancers for which both the incidence rates and the death rates are rising: lung, skin, female breast, prostate, kidney and non-Hodgkin's lymphomas. Many of these are major killers. These six are unmitigated bad news.
It is common to "explain away" rising cancer rates by observing that the biggest increase is in lung cancer, and then to write off these deaths as inconsequential because many of them they are caused by tobacco, and are therefore, in some sense, self-inflicted. This view ignores compelling evidence that tobacco is as addictive as heroin and morphine,4] and that tobacco corporations spend billions each year to get people hooked and keep them that way.
This view also avoids asking: what is it about life that impels so many peoples to inflict an early, painful death upon themselves and upon those they live with?
The new JAMA study distinguishes cancers related to smoking (lung, mouth, larynx and pharynx) and shows that non-tobacco-related cancers are also rising among Americans. A white male born in the 1940s has twice the chance of getting a non-tobacco-related cancer, compared to his grandfather. Among women born in the 1940s, the chance of a non-tobacco-related cancer is 30% higher, compared to their grandmothers' chances.
The study concludes that cancer-causing hazards besides smoking have been introduced into the US population in the past several decades, and into other industrialised countries as well. Better diagnosis explains some but not all of the increase, JAMA says, because the rise in cancers started before improved diagnostics became available.
Sweden has been maintaining proper cancer statistics longer than any other country in the world, and a recent study of Swedish people shows cancers rising among younger populations there, just as in the US. This is important bad news.
The recently introduced causes of cancer in Sweden and the US remain largely unidentified. Medical and industrial sources of radiation are certainly implicated, though often ignored; the JAMA study does not mention radiation.
The study suggests that something useful might be learned by studying farmers. Farmers smoke less and are more active than most people. They are also exposed to more engine exhausts, chemical solvents, pesticides, fuels, animal viruses and sunlight than most people. Could these exposures be why farmers get more cancers than other people?
After 20 years of fruitless searching for a "cure" for cancer, the search now seems to be veering, slowly, toward a new goal: finding the preventable causes of cancer, such as exposures to radiation and certain chemicals, and who knows what else.
[From Rachel's Hazardous Waste News (US).]