Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Medicine Stats

Can Mapping Differences in Cancer Rates Help Pinpoint Environmental Factors? (telegraph.co.uk) 25

"Scientists have made the first steps to develop an atlas of world cancer, hoping it will bring us closer to a cure," reports the Telegraph.

"A map showing stark differences in the incidence of 10 types of cancer between Spain and Portugal has sparked a race to pinpoint causes and risk factors people should avoid." It shows huge differences for people living only a short distance apart, sometimes across the border between Spain and Portugal, and others occurring within the same country. Scientists say it will take years to solve the puzzle completely but are confident that the map provides the pieces. There are easier questions and more complex riddles. But it all points to environmental factors — as opposed to genetics — playing a major role in causing cancers.

The lung cancer map tells a clear story of far higher levels of smoking tobacco in Spain than in Portugal, with the latter country showing a consistent hue of dark blue for a lower risk of mortality, while Spain has large areas lit up in red, at least on the map representing men. Twenty per cent of Spanish adults are daily smokers, compared with just over 11 per cent in Portugal. But the data from cancer of the larynx, also linked to smoking, tells a vastly different story, with a high mortality risk for men shown straddling the border in southern Portugal and south western Spain, as well as patches in the north of both countries. "The lung cancer and smoking connection is very clear, so why in other cancers that have a strong link with tobacco are we seeing such surprising differences?" asks Pablo Fernández-Navarro, the lead co-ordinator of the atlas from the Spanish side.

"This is what is so fantastic. If whole countries had uniform levels of mortality, the maps would be in plain colours. Given that it is not the case, now we have to investigate and explain these differences, eliminating one factor after another," Fernández-Navarro told The Telegraph.

In the case of larynx cancer, the Spanish epidemiologist says the map confirms that smoking is by no means the only risk factor, and that other elements must also be at work, from alcohol intake to levels of pollutants such as asbestos or petrochemicals in the environment.

Thanks to Slashdot reader Bruce66423 for sharing the link.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Can Mapping Differences in Cancer Rates Help Pinpoint Environmental Factors?

Comments Filter:
  • The entire world is surrounded by a magnetic field which is how compasses work etc. Recent brain cancer therapy that they're actually finding to be successful involve spinning magnets around the brain. Looking at both of those, is there certain parts of the world with stronger or weaker magnetic influences that affect the growth rate of cancer?
    • Maybe a little, but the hidden secondary influence for most of these cancers is going to turn out to be primarily linked to dietary factors or insufficient sanitation practices. There will also be both resistances and weaknesses to certain cancers that are genetically based, but in the end it's gonna be mostly stuff like "Don't eat palm oil." and "Wash your hands after you poop."

    • shame on you for not trying to think & learn first. The Terran mag field is a tiny fraction of the fields near any electric power transformer, which are a microscopic fraction of the fields in any medical probe instrumentation.

  • Source Publication (Score:5, Informative)

    by Ween ( 13381 ) on Sunday February 06, 2022 @09:53PM (#62244749)

    Hereâ(TM)s the non-paywalled link to the actual research pdf document. Website is very slow right now.
      https://www.isciii.es/QueHacem... [isciii.es]

  • by WoodstockJeff ( 568111 ) on Sunday February 06, 2022 @10:15PM (#62244795) Homepage

    Mapping disease rates has worked for decades. Not just for cancer, but things like heart disease and diet advertising. Why is this even a question?

    • by Jack9 ( 11421 ) on Monday February 07, 2022 @12:55AM (#62245007)

      > Why is this even a question?

      There are corporations who have battled against studies that show their products, industry, and infrastructure cause cancer for almost 100 years.
      From the brain cancer scares of the 90s to the known Leukemia risks associated with locality to high traffic roads (ie Freeways) to Erin Brockovich to Monsanto, the world has suffered all manner of interference and FUD from companies trying to defend themselves from liability...even when it wasn't necessary.

      European countries and multinational organizations have dared to start to look for patterns again, which will likely bring up a whole new war on science to push that cancers are an inherent medical mystery that are largely random. Luckily, data is abundant and easily accessible, which will make it much harder than decades past.

      • There's also another interesting technological side this story: Over a decade ago I had a student who was developing a medical records system for his region of Spain. Spain had designed a standard data model for recording patients' medical data & each region was developing open source IT systems to implement it. This means that it's much easier to gather the data to do these kinds of analyses, not just geographical but also demographical. Yes, it was possible before but very difficult because of the typ
    • The Love Canal cancer clusters were a big deal in the 70s. I think the OP just wanted to thwart Bettridge or something.
    • I think they just want to get funding to do it.
      There is going to be a group of people who will not want to fund it, besides saying they don't want to do it, because it would show their dirty laundry, where popular businesses which are economic drivers for the area, may be shown to be causing a lot of harm to their communities.

      I live near a small town, who's economy is centered around plastics manufacturer. The water supply (including the private wells) were polluted with PFOA, in which causes cancer. A Ci

  • ... in children. That will make the nuclear fanatics try to suppress this.

    • So there's no mention of leukemia, children, or nuclear plants in the TFA or the original that I can see. Are you just fearmongering or what?

Remember the good old days, when CPU was singular?

Working...