美国癌症感染原因的新证据。

IF 5.2 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Heidi E Brown, Leslie K Dennis, Priscilla Lauro, Purva Jain, Erin Pelley, Eyal Oren
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引用次数: 6

摘要

在世界范围内,目前估计有15%的新癌症病例是由传染性病原体造成的。其中大多数(92%,即200万新发癌症病例)可归因于4种感染因子:幽门螺杆菌、人乳头瘤病毒、乙型和丙型肝炎病毒。更好地了解感染因子与美国癌症负担的关系可能有助于新的诊断和治疗工作。我们回顾了美国特定的感染相关癌症的粗死亡率,并描述了自1999年以来的时间和空间趋势。我们通过报告感染-癌症关联的可归因分数的现有估计,回顾了美国特定的感染-癌症关联的证据。与已确定的感染相关的癌症导致的死亡因地理位置而异,但对美国可归因比例的估计仅限于少数观察性研究。为了描述美国感染相关癌症的负担,需要额外的观察性研究来估计全国和亚人群内感染的患病率。随着解释癌症病因的传染性关联的出现,减轻负担的新机会和挑战出现了。改善对美国的估计将有助于针对高风险亚人群进行干预。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Emerging Evidence for Infectious Causes of Cancer in the United States.

Worldwide, infectious agents currently contribute to an estimated 15% of new cancer cases. Most of these (92%, or 2 million new cancer cases) are attributable to 4 infectious agents: Helicobacter pylori, human papillomavirus, and hepatitis B and C viruses. A better understanding of how infectious agents relate to the US cancer burden may assist new diagnostic and treatment efforts. We review US-specific crude mortality rates from infection-associated cancers and describe temporal and spatial trends since 1999. We review the US-specific evidence for infection-cancer associations by reporting available estimates for attributable fractions for the infection-cancer associations. Death due to cancers with established infectious associations varies geographically, but estimates for the US attributable fraction are limited to a few observational studies. To describe the burden of infection-associated cancer in the United States, additional observational studies are necessary to estimate the prevalence of infection nationally and within subpopulations. As infectious associations emerge to explain cancer etiologies, new opportunities and challenges to reducing the burden arise. Improved estimates for the United States would help target interventions to higher-risk subpopulations.

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来源期刊
Epidemiologic Reviews
Epidemiologic Reviews 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
8.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
10
期刊介绍: Epidemiologic Reviews is a leading review journal in public health. Published once a year, issues collect review articles on a particular subject. Recent issues have focused on The Obesity Epidemic, Epidemiologic Research on Health Disparities, and Epidemiologic Approaches to Global Health.
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