Saturday 7 January 2017

WHY ARE MORE MEN THAN WOMEN LIKELY TO DIE OF CANCER?

Image result for CANCERThe American Cancer Society's comprehensive annual report on cancer incidence, mortality, and survival. It is published in CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians and is accompanied by a consumer version of the publication, Cancer Facts and Figures 2017. The report estimates that in 2017, there will be higher cancer incidence and mortality rate in men than women.

The report finds significant gender disparities in incidence rate of 20% higher in men than in women, while the cancer death rate is 40% higher in men.

The gender gap in cancer mortality largely reflects disparity in the distribution of cancers that occur in men and women, much of which is due to differences in the prevalence of cancer risk factors.

For example, liver cancer, a highly fatal cancer, is three times more common in men than in women, partly reflecting higher Hepatitis C/B virus infection, historical smoking prevalence, and excess alcohol consumption in men. The largest sex disparities are for cancers of the oesophagus, larynx, and bladder, for which incidence and death rates are about 4times higher in men. Melanoma incidence rates are about 60% higher in men than in women, while melanoma death rates are more than double in men compared to women.
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Friday 6 January 2017

NEW STUDY LINKED ASTHMA SEVERITY TO BLACKS

Asthma a respiratory condition marked by attacks of spasm in the bronchi of the lungs, causing difficulty in breathing. It is usually connected to allergic reaction or other forms of hypersensitivity.

Airway inflammation is major part of asthma, and advancement in treatment are becoming more individualized based on the specific type of airway inflammation in a patient. Differences in airway inflammation can affect a patient's response to treatment, but whether the patterns of airway inflammation differ across race has, until now, been very unclear.

Black men and women are two to three times more likely than whites to be hospitalized or die from asthma. And while many factors contribute to the burden of asthma in African Americans -- such as access to health care and environmental exposures -- rates are disproportionate even when social and environmental elements are taken into account.

African Americans may be less responsive to asthma treatment and more likely to die from the condition, in part, because they have a unique type of airway inflammation, according to a recent study. 


The study is one of the largest and most diverse trials conducted in the U.S. on race and asthma, with 26 percent of the patients identified as African American. Researchers found that black patients were more likely to exhibit eosinophilic airway inflammation than whites, despite taking comparable doses of asthma medication, such as inhaled corticosteroids. The results are published in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology.


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