Close X
Friday, November 22, 2024
ADVT 
Health & Fitness

Obesity increasing cancer cases

Darpan News Desk IANS, 26 Nov, 2014 11:32 AM
    Excess body weight causes over 480,000 new cancer cases per year - 3.6 percent of cancers worldwide - in adults, new estimates suggest.
     
    The burden is far higher in more developed countries with almost two-thirds (64 percent) of these obesity-related cancers occurring in North America and Europe, the findings showed.
     
    "Our findings add support for a global effort to address the rising trends in obesity. The global prevalence of obesity in adults has doubled since 1980. If this trend continues it will certainly boost the future burden of cancer," warned Melina Arnold from the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC).
     
    Based on the results, the researchers estimate that a quarter of all obesity-related cancers in 2012 were attributable to the rising average body mass index (BMI) in the population since 1982.
     
    Using data from a number of sources including the GLOBOCAN database of cancer incidence and mortality for 184 countries, Arnold and colleagues created a model to estimate the fraction of cancers associated with excess bodyweight in countries and regions worldwide in 2012, and the proportion that could be attributed to increasing BMI since 1982.
     
    The findings reveal that obesity-related cancer is a greater problem for women than men, largely due to endometrial (womb/uterus) and post-menopausal breast cancers.
     
    In men, excess weight was responsible for nearly 136,000 new cancers in 2012 and in women, it was around 345,000 new cases.
     
    In developed countries, around eight percent of cancers in women and three percent in men were associated with excess bodyweight, compared with 1.5 percent of cancers in women and about 0.3 percent of cancers in men in developing countries.
     
    North America contributed by far the most cases with 111,000 cancers - equivalent to almost a quarter (23 percent) of all new obesity-related cancers globally.
     
    The study appeared in the journal The Lancet Oncology.

    MORE Health & Fitness ARTICLES

    High-fat diet may postpone brain ageing

    High-fat diet may postpone brain ageing
    Danish researchers have found that signs of brain ageing, which manifests itself in forms such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease, could be...

    High-fat diet may postpone brain ageing

    Y chromosome does not affect women's sexuality

    Y chromosome does not affect women's sexuality
    Women born with a rare condition that gives them a Y chromosome do not only look like women physically, they also have the same brain responses...

    Y chromosome does not affect women's sexuality

    Daily meditation: a boon for breast cancer survivors

    Daily meditation: a boon for breast cancer survivors
    Practising meditation has a positive physical impact at the cellular level in breast cancer survivors, new research shows....

    Daily meditation: a boon for breast cancer survivors

    Long term shift work hampers memory

    Long term shift work hampers memory
    Long term shift work can help you earn more but it could adversely affect your brain functions, such as memory and processing speed, says a research....

    Long term shift work hampers memory

    Poor eating habits have long term effects on heart

    Poor eating habits have long term effects on heart
    Poor eating habits can affect your heart for a long time and the effects can persist long after dietary habits are improved, shows a research....

    Poor eating habits have long term effects on heart

    Kick the butt to avoid chronic back pain

    Kick the butt to avoid chronic back pain
    Smokers are three times more likely than non-smokers to develop chronic back pain, warns a research....

    Kick the butt to avoid chronic back pain