Preventive medicine
-
Preventive medicine · May 2019
Estimates of the future burden of cancer attributable to infections in Canada.
More than 7000 incident cancers diagnosed in Canada in 2015 were attributable to infections. The future infection-associated cancer burden can be lowered by reducing the prevalence of major cancer-causing infections; hepatitis B virus (HBV), hepatitis C virus (HCV), Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) and human papillomavirus (HPV). We modeled the future impact of (1) 10%, 25%, and 50% relative reductions in the prevalence of HBV, HCV and H. pylori and (2) different school-based HPV vaccination coverage levels (lower, current, higher) on Canadian cancer incidence by the year 2042. ⋯ A 50% counterfactual reduction in the prevalence of HBV, HCV and H. pylori could prevent an estimated 10,585 cancers from 2018 to 2042; a 25% reduction could prevent 5293 cancers and a 10% reduction could prevent 2117 cancers. Assuming continuity of current estimated country-wide HPV vaccine coverage, 3977 anogenital and 1073 head and neck cancers could be prevented from 2018 to 2042, whereas vaccine coverage of 80% in girls and boys could prevent an additional 311 cancers. Almost 16,000 cancers could be prevented in Canada from 2018 to 2042 with a 50% relative reduction in HBV, HCV and H. pylori prevalence and 80% HPV vaccine coverage of girls and boys.
-
Preventive medicine · May 2019
Estimates of the current and future burden of cancer attributable to sedentary behavior in Canada.
Leisure-time sedentary behavior is an emerging modifiable risk factor for cancer. We estimated the proportion of cancers attributed to leisure-time sedentary behavior as a separate risk factor from physical activity in Canada for 2015. We projected numbers of future avoidable cancers by 2042 using various assumed levels of reduced leisure-time sedentary behavior in the population. ⋯ The total attributable burden due to leisure-time sedentary behavior was estimated to be 10.3% for associated cancers and 6.5% for all-cancers in 2015. A 50% reduction in leisure-time sedentary behavior across the Canadian population could avoid 4054 cancers by 2042. We estimated that over 3000 cancer cases in Canada were attributable to leisure-time sedentary behavior in 2015, and that that 4054 incident cancer cases could be prevented by 2042 with meaningful reductions in leisure-time sedentary behavior.