by morris sherman, university of toronto
deaths from liver cancer in canada have doubled over the past 25 years. and to make matters worse, there’s an epidemic of liver cancer on the horizon if action isn’t taken soon.while less people are dying from most major cancers — such as
breast cancer and lung cancer — liver cancer (hepatocellular carcinoma or hcc) is bucking the trend and heading in the wrong direction.in 1993,
liver cancer rates in canadian men were five cases per 100,000 population. by 2017 this had risen to 9.9 cases.for women, rates are much lower, but the trend is the same. in 1993, 1.6 canadian women per 100,000 were diagnosed with liver cancer; by 2017 this had almost doubled. in hard numbers this means that last year 1,900 men in canada were diagnosed with liver cancer and 580 women. a total of 950 men died from liver cancer and 270 women.this is not unique to canada; a
similar pattern is seen in the united states, the united kingdom, australia and most other developed countries.
the role of hepatitis and obesity
what are the reasons for this increase, and why are they being discussed at the global hepatitis summit? it is because both
hepatitis b and
hepatitis c are serious liver infections that cause inflammation.when left untreated, both infections can progress to liver scarring, cirrhosis, liver cancer and, ultimately, an early death.today, there are an estimated 230,000 canadians with hepatitis b and 250,000 with hepatitis c. almost half of each group do not know they are infected, which hugely increases their risk of progression to serious liver disease and cancer.an enormous effort will be needed from provincial and territorial governments —with federal government support — to find, diagnose and treat these missing patients and to link them to care.also contributing to canada’s liver cancer problem is the
obesity epidemic: about two thirds of canadian men and half of women are thought to be overweight or obese.some one in five canadians have some degree of
non-2022年世界杯预选赛阿根廷 liver disease (nafld), which causes inflammation and can progress to cirrhosis and liver cancer.
a lack of liver cancer specialists
canada’s limited number of liver specialists (less than 100 nationwide) and a few oncologists dealt with around 5,000 cases of liver cancer during 2017.however, the hepatitis b and c epidemics, combined with canada’s continuously increasing
obesity problem, threaten to drown liver cancer specialists with new cases in the coming decades — with numbers reaching tens of thousands annually over the next 20 years.we are completely unprepared to deal with such an epidemic of liver cancer. not only would we be submerged in the sheer number of cases, the financial considerations for provinces and territories and the federal government would be phenomenal.and many of these liver cancers strike people in their 50s, when they are still of working age. so families are not only in danger of losing a loved one, but possibly the main breadwinner in their family unit.