Record aantal gevallen van borstkanker in Engeland.*
Voor het eerst is de grens van 40.000 jaarlijkse nieuwe
gevallen van borstkanker in Engeland gepasseerd.
The number of British women
diagnosed with breast cancer each year has reached its highest level
ever, topping 40,000 for the first time, according to new figures released on
Monday by a leading charity.
Cancer Research UK said the
number of cases would keep increasing for some time, but screening and improved
treatments meant more women are being successfully treated than ever before.
Currently, three out of four
women diagnosed with the disease survive for five years or more, and annual
death rates have dropped 21 percent over the past 10 years to around 13,000 in
2001.
"Tamoxifen has been in
use for 20 years and the screening programme has been up and running for the
last 15. These two advances alone account for significant improvements in
survival," said Professor Jack Cuzick, head of Cancer Research UK's
epidemiology, mathematics and statistics department at the Wolfson Institute for
Preventive Medicine in London.
He said the reasons for the
increasing number of cases were harder to understand, but were related to levels
of the female hormone oestrogen.
"We know that obesity in
post menopausal women is a risk factor and that it can raise the levels of
oestrogen. We also know that levels of obesity have been rising steadily in the
past decade and this may be contributing to the upward trend."
Genes also play a role, as do
late menopause and the early onset of periods, which can also increase exposure
to the hormone, he said.
The charity's clinical
director Professor Robert Souhami said research was beginning to uncover the
factors that affect risk.
"In the meantime, early
detection remains very important in preventing deaths from breast cancer and it
is essential that women are aware of this and attend for screening when they are
invited." (2003)