- Global Cancer Incidence and Screening
- Colorectal Cancer Screening and Detection
- Nutritional Studies and Diet
- Cervical Cancer and HPV Research
- Global Public Health Policies and Epidemiology
- Occupational and environmental lung diseases
- Cancer Risks and Factors
- Lung Cancer Diagnosis and Treatment
- Air Quality and Health Impacts
- Advances in Oncology and Radiotherapy
- Viral-associated cancers and disorders
- Head and Neck Cancer Studies
- Frailty in Older Adults
- Economic and Financial Impacts of Cancer
- Esophageal Cancer Research and Treatment
- Radiomics and Machine Learning in Medical Imaging
- Nutrition, Genetics, and Disease
- Genital Health and Disease
- Folate and B Vitamins Research
- Multiple and Secondary Primary Cancers
- Fluoride Effects and Removal
- Liver Disease Diagnosis and Treatment
- Gastric Cancer Management and Outcomes
- Occupational exposure and asthma
- Consumer Attitudes and Food Labeling
Centre International de Recherche sur le Cancer
2016-2025
World Health Organization - Pakistan
2022
Université Paris Cité
1995
Cochin University of Science and Technology
1995
HPV is the cause of almost all cervical cancer and responsible for a substantial fraction other anogenital cancers oropharyngeal cancers. Understanding HPV‐attributable burden can boost programs vaccination HPV‐based screening. Attributable fractions (AFs) relative contributions different types were derived from published studies reporting on prevalence transforming infection in tissue. Maps age‐standardized incidence rates by country GLOBOCAN 2012 data are shown separately cervix, tract...
Abstract The European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC) is an ongoing multi-centre prospective cohort study designed to investigate the relationship between nutrition cancer, with potential for studying other diseases as well. currently includes 519 978 participants (366 521 women 153 457 men, mostly aged 35–70 years) in 23 centres located 10 countries, be followed cancer incidence cause-specific mortality several decades. At enrolment, which took place 1992 2000 at...
BackgroundInfections with certain viruses, bacteria, and parasites are strong risk factors for specific cancers. As new cancer statistics epidemiological findings have accumulated in the past 5 years, we aimed to assess causal involvement of main carcinogenic agents different types year 2012.MethodsWe considered ten infectious classified as human beings by International Agency Research on Cancer. We calculated number cases 2012 attributable infections country, combining incidence estimates...
Objective Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common worldwide. The geographical and temporal burden of this provides insights into risk factor prevalence progress in control strategies. We examine current future CRC 185 countries 2020 2040. Methods Data on cases deaths were extracted from GLOBOCAN database for year 2020. Age-standardised incidence mortality rates calculated by sex, country, world region Human Development Index (HDI) countries. Age-specific also estimated. predicted...
We previously estimated that 660,000 cases of cancer in the year 2008 were attributable to bacterium Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori), corresponding 5.2% 12.7 million total occurred worldwide. In recent years, evidence has accumulated immunoblot (western blot) is more sensitive for detection anti-H. antibodies than ELISA, method used our previous analysis. The purpose this short report update fraction (AF) estimate H. after briefly reviewing new evidence, and reassess global burden pylori....
BackgroundTracking progress and providing timely evidence is a fundamental step forward for countries to remain aligned with the targets set by WHO eliminate cervical cancer as public health problem (ie, reduce incidence of disease below threshold 4 cases per 100 000 women-years). We aimed assess extent global inequalities in mortality, based on The Global Cancer Observatory (GLOBOCAN) 2020 estimates, including geographical socioeconomic development, temporal aspects.MethodsFor this...
Despite many cases being preventable, cutaneous melanoma remains the most serious skin cancer worldwide. Understanding scale and profile of disease is vital to concentrate reinforce global prevention efforts.
Population ageing has substantially contributed to the rising number of new cancer cases worldwide. We document incidence patterns in 2012 among older adults globally, and examine changing magnitude this age group over next decades. Using GLOBOCAN data, we presented proportion cases, truncated age‐standardised rates aged 65 years for all sites combined five most common by world region. calculated 2035 applying population projections, assuming no changes rates. In 2012, 6.7 million (47.5%...
BackgroundTo examine global patterns of gastric cancer in 2020 and the projected burden 2040.MethodsData on primary were extracted from GLOBOCAN database for year 2020. Age-standardized incidence mortality rates calculated by sex, country, world region level human development index (HDI) 185 countries. The predicted 2040 was based demographic projections.FindingsIn total, ∼1.1 million new cases 770,000 deaths estimated Incidence average 2-fold higher males than females (15.8 7.0 per 100,000,...
Abstract Using GLOBOCAN estimates, we describe the estimated cancer incidence among adults aged 80 years or older at regional and global level in 2018, reporting number of new cases, truncated age‐standardised rates (per 100 000) for all sites combined this age group. We also presented five most frequent cancers diagnosed by region globally females males 65 to 79 old older. We, finally, cases 2050, proportion older, proportional increase between 2018 2050 region, applying population...
Abstract Ovarian cancer remains to have relatively poor prognosis particularly in low‐resourced settings. It is therefore important continually examine the burden of ovarian identify areas disparities. Our study aims provide an overview global using GLOBOCAN 2020 estimates by country, world region, and Human Development Index (HDI) levels, as well predicted future year 2040 HDI. Age‐standardized incidence mortality rates for 185 countries were calculated four‐tier The number new cases deaths...
BackgroundCancer is a leading cause of premature mortality globally. This study estimates deaths at ages 30–69 years and distinguishes these as that are preventable (avertable through primary or secondary prevention) treatable curative treatment) in 185 countries worldwide.MethodsFor this population-based study, estimated cancer by country, cancer, sex, age groups were retrieved from the International Agency for Research on Cancer's GLOBOCAN 2020 database. Crude age-adjusted cancer-specific...
Abstract Introduction In 2020, bladder cancer (BC) was the seventh most prevalent in world, with 5-year prevalence of more than 1.7 million cases. Due to main risk factors—smoking and chemical exposures—associated BC, it is considered a largely preventable avoidable cancer. An overview BC mortality can allow an insight not only into global factors, but also varying efficiency healthcare systems worldwide. For this purpose, study analyzes national estimates for 2020 projected future trends up...
ABSTRACT Naturally occurring genetic variants of human papillomavirus type 16 (HPV16) are common and have previously been classified into 4 major lineages; European-Asian (EAS), including the sublineages European (EUR) Asian (As), African 1 (AFR1), 2 (AFR2), North-American/Asian-American (NA/AA). We aimed to improve classification HPV16 variant lineages by using a large resource HPV16-positive cervical samples collected from geographically diverse populations in studies on HPV and/or cancer...