General Oncology



General Oncology





CANCER EPIDEMIOLOGY

Anita Kumar

Victoria Blinder


Cancer Epidemiology Research Methods



  • Epidemiology: Study of distribution, determinants, & outcomes of cancer at a population level; applies public health or policy perspective, rather than the perspective of an individual pt


  • “Efficacy”: Treatment demonstrates an effect, often in a clinical trial, vs. “effectiveness”: Effect in “real-world,” at the population level


  • Observational studies: Cross-sectional, cohort, & case-control


  • Experimental studies: Individual-based vs. community-based


  • Epidemiology research can include analyses of patterns of care, comparative outcomes, cost-effectiveness, & health care disparities.


  • A classic study showed women w/breast cancer who are uninsured or on Medicaid had a higher risk of death compared to women w/private insurance (NEJM 1993;329:326).


  • Molecular & genetic epidemiology: Identification of biomarkers & genetic features linked to cancer susceptibility


Cancer Cases and Deaths

U.S. cancer incidence trends 1998-2008 (ACS Cancer Facts & Figures 2012):



  • Cancer is a disease of older individuals, incidence ↑ w/aging population


  • ↓ in lung cancer due to decline in smoking


  • ↓ in colorectal, cervical cancer w/early detection, screening


  • ↓ in stomach cancer due to ↓ in H. pylori infection


  • ↓ in prostate cancer incidence due to ↓ in PSA screening


  • Stable breast cancer incidence (period of decline in 2002-2003 due to ↓ in HRT use)


  • ↑ incidence of HPV-related oropharyngeal cancer, esophageal adenocarcinoma, liver & intrahepatic bile duct, pancreas, thyroid, melanoma of skin, & kidney cancer






Figure 1-1


Global Cancer Epidemiology



  • Temporal trends: (1) Cancer incidence is ↑ in the developing world due to

    ↑ longevity, & growing adoption of Western diet, physical inactivity, & tobacco use; (2) ↓ incidence of cancers due to infectious etiologies (stomach, liver, uterine cervix)


  • Environmental factors that contribute to geographic distribution of cancer, eg, stomach cancer incidence rates highest in Eastern Asia & Central/Eastern Europe due to chronic H. pylori infection & diets high in salt & processed foods, low in fresh fruits & vegetables


  • Migration studies: Japanese migrants to California have lower rates of gastric cancer compared to country of origin, but higher than California residents (Cancer 1965;18:656)



Etiologic Agents in Cancer














































































































Agent


Cancer(s)


Tobacco:




  • 33% of cancer deaths in the United States are caused by smoking (IARC: World Cancer Report: 2010)



  • In 1950, the first large studies published linking smoking & lung cancer (BMJ 1950;2:739; JAMA 1950;143:329)



  • Tobacco-related carcinogenesis: Tobacco → multiple carcinogens → covalent bonds formed w/DNA → DNA adducts → miscoding → mutations


Lung, larynx, nasal, oral cavity, esophagus, liver, pancreas, cervix, bladder, leukemia, & colorectal


Infectious:


Hepatitis C Virus


Liver


Hepatitis B Virus


Liver


Epstein Barr Virus


Burkitt lymphoma, nasopharynx, Hodgkin lymphoma


Herpes Simplex Virus 8


Kaposi sarcoma, pulm effusion lymphoma, Castleman disease


HPV


Anogenital & oral cavity


Polyomavirus


Merkel cell carcinoma


JC virus


Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy


HTLV-1


Adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma


HIV-associated


Kaposi sarcoma, cervix, various NHL


H. Pylori


Stomach


Schistosomiasis


Bladder (squamous cell)


Inflammation:


Acute & chronic inflammation contributes to multiple cancers


Reflux esophagitis → Barrett esophagitis → esophageal cancer


Liver cirrhosis: Liver cancer


Chronic pancreatitis: Pancreas cancer


Chemical Factors:


Asbestos, silica


Lung, mesothelioma


Radon, nickel dust, arsenic, chronium


Lung


EtOH


Oral cavity, esophagus, liver


Aromatic amines


Bladder


Cadmium


Prostate


Benzene


Leukemia


Smoked, salted, pickled foods


Stomach


Aflatoxin


Liver


Estrogen (HRT)


Breast, endometrial


Androgen


Prostate


Immunosuppressants


NHL


Physical Factors:


IR (Chernobyl, atomic bomb)


Thyroid, leukemia, other solid tumors


UV light


Skin cancers


Lifestyle Factors:


Obesity


Breast, endometrial, prostate, esophagus


Diet—complex exposure



Beta-carotene (JAMA 2003;290:476, JNCI 1996;88:1550)


↑ lung cancer deaths




CANCER PREVENTION & SCREENING

Payal D. Shah

Victoria Blinder


General Principles



  • Primary cancer prevention: To reduce cancer incidence & mortality; eg, smoking cessation, sun avoidance, cancer virus vaccination, chemoprevention


  • Screening: Method of secondary cancer prevention; to identify asx cancers w/the goal of earlier interventions & mortality reduction


  • Note various guidelines (USPSTF, NCCN, ACS, ASCO, etc.) differ

Aug 17, 2016 | Posted by in ONCOLOGY | Comments Off on General Oncology

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