| Literature DB >> 26455822 |
Delphine Praud1, Matteo Rota2, Jürgen Rehm3,4,5,6, Kevin Shield3,5, Witold Zatoński7, Mia Hashibe8, Carlo La Vecchia1, Paolo Boffetta9.
Abstract
Alcohol consumption is a major cause of disease and death. In a previous study, we reported that in 2002, 3.6% of all cases of cancer and a similar proportion of cancer deaths were attributable to the consumption of alcohol. We aimed to update these figures to 2012 using global estimates of cancer cases and cancer deaths, data on the prevalence of drinkers from the World Health Organization (WHO) global survey on alcohol and health, and relative risks for alcohol-related neoplasms from a recent meta-analysis. Over the 10-year period considered, the total number of alcohol-attributable cancer cases increased to approximately 770,000 worldwide (5.5% of the total number of cancer cases)-540,000 men (7.2%) and 230,000 women (3.5%). Corresponding figures for cancer deaths attributable to alcohol consumption increased to approximately 480,000 (5.8% of the total number of cancer deaths) in both sexes combined-360,000 (7.8%) men and 120,000 (3.3%) women. These proportions were particularly high in the WHO Western Pacific region, the WHO European region and the WHO South-East Asia region. A high burden of cancer mortality and morbidity is attributable to alcohol, and public health measures should be adopted in order to limit excessive alcohol consumption.Entities:
Keywords: alcohol; attributable fraction; incidence; mortality; neoplasms
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26455822 DOI: 10.1002/ijc.29890
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Cancer ISSN: 0020-7136 Impact factor: 7.396