TY - JOUR
T1 - Cancer among the circumpolar Inuit, 1989-2003. II. Patterns and trends
AU - Kelly, Janet
AU - Lanier, Anne
AU - Santos, Maria
AU - Healey, Sylvia
AU - Louchini, Rabia
AU - Friborg, Jeppe
AU - Young, Kue
AU - Ng, Carmina
AU - Circumpolar Inuit Cancer Review Working Group
PY - 2008/12
Y1 - 2008/12
N2 - OBJECTIVES: This is the second of 2 papers reporting on the result of the Circumpolar Inuit Cancer Review, an international collaborative effort involving researchers and health officials from Alaska, Canada and Greenland.METHODS: Inuit cancer cases by age-sex group and anatomic site were obtained from the regional cancer registries.RESULTS: Cancer in general is increasing among Inuit, in all regions, and among both men and women. Inuit continue to be at extreme high risk, relative to non-Inuit and to comparisons of global populations, for the historically recognized so-called traditional cancers (such as cancer of the nasopharynx and salivary glands). Among the so-called modern cancers prevalent in developed societies, lung cancer is rapidly increasing in incidence (especially in Canada), such that the rate in both Inuit men and women is the highest in the world; other cancers, such as colorectal cancer, are also on the rise (especially in Alaska), while breast and prostate cancer remain low relative to the non-Inuit population. The decline in cervical cancer is a positive development; in the 3 regions, the rate in Greenland is the highest.CONCLUSIONS: Data such as these can form the basis of interventions directed towards known risk factors such as smoking, diet, obesity, viral and bacterial infections, and low screening prevalence. Cancer surveillance is a basic task of the public health system; in the Arctic, it is particularly important as Inuit continue to undergo further changes in their life-styles and social environments.
AB - OBJECTIVES: This is the second of 2 papers reporting on the result of the Circumpolar Inuit Cancer Review, an international collaborative effort involving researchers and health officials from Alaska, Canada and Greenland.METHODS: Inuit cancer cases by age-sex group and anatomic site were obtained from the regional cancer registries.RESULTS: Cancer in general is increasing among Inuit, in all regions, and among both men and women. Inuit continue to be at extreme high risk, relative to non-Inuit and to comparisons of global populations, for the historically recognized so-called traditional cancers (such as cancer of the nasopharynx and salivary glands). Among the so-called modern cancers prevalent in developed societies, lung cancer is rapidly increasing in incidence (especially in Canada), such that the rate in both Inuit men and women is the highest in the world; other cancers, such as colorectal cancer, are also on the rise (especially in Alaska), while breast and prostate cancer remain low relative to the non-Inuit population. The decline in cervical cancer is a positive development; in the 3 regions, the rate in Greenland is the highest.CONCLUSIONS: Data such as these can form the basis of interventions directed towards known risk factors such as smoking, diet, obesity, viral and bacterial infections, and low screening prevalence. Cancer surveillance is a basic task of the public health system; in the Arctic, it is particularly important as Inuit continue to undergo further changes in their life-styles and social environments.
KW - Alaska/epidemiology
KW - Arctic Regions/epidemiology
KW - Canada/epidemiology
KW - Female
KW - Greenland/epidemiology
KW - Humans
KW - Incidence
KW - Inuit/statistics & numerical data
KW - Male
KW - Neoplasms/ethnology
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 19186762
SN - 1239-9736
VL - 67
SP - 408
EP - 420
JO - International Journal of Circumpolar Health
JF - International Journal of Circumpolar Health
IS - 5
ER -