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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: million cancer + million worldwide + cancer  Related to the article below (Last Update: 5/13/2008)

RI gets first nanotechnology center
Jakarta Post, Indonesia -
It is estimated cancer kills more than six million people per year worldwide, with more than 10 million new cases diagnosed annually. ...
Start of Phase II Clinical Study for Rabies Monoclonal Antibody ...
FOXBusiness -
Every year approximately 10 million people are vaccinated against the disease worldwide. Rabies causes over 50000 deaths each year, mainly in Asia and ...
Crucell Announces First Quarter 2008 Results CNNMoney.com
all 16 news articles »  CRXL - OTC:CMTX

The Money Times
Onyx Pharmaceuticals swings to 1Q profit on cancer drug
Forbes, NY - May 6, 2008
Nexavar had worldwide sales of $151.9 million in the first quarter. Shares of Onyx Pharmaceuticals (nasdaq: ONXX - news - people ) rose 33 cents to close at ...
Onyx Pharmaceuticals Inc. Q1 2008 Earnings Call Transcript Seeking Alpha
Earnings Roundup TMCnet
Onyx Pharmaceuticals Reports 2008 First Quarter Results Earthtimes (press release)
all 37 news articles »  ONXX - EBS
Sunquest Announces $1.1 Million Lab Software Expansion at Sutter ...
Business Wire (press release), CA -
Serving more than 100 communities in Northern California, Sutter Health is a regional leader in cardiac care, cancer treatment, orthopedics, obstetrics, ...
Nuclear wasteland
Winnipeg Sun, Canada -
... reactor led to a worldwide shortage of isotopes used in cancer and heart tests. During the crisis it was revealed AECL had spent $600 million trying, ...

Health Newstrack
Canada joins worldwide cancer research effort
Vancouver Sun,  Canada - Apr 29, 2008
The project, which is expected to take up to a decade, will cost an estimated $200 million. More than 7.5 million people worldwide died of cancer in 2007 ...
Canada to lead research on genetics of cancer CTV.ca
International Consortium Will Hunt Down Genetics of Cancer U.S. News & World Report
Global researchers join hands to fight cancer AFP
Globe and Mail - CBC.ca
all 82 news articles »
PDL BioPharma Reports First Quarter 2008 Financial Results
CNNMoney.com - May 8, 2008
... cancer and in phase 1 trials in non-small cell lung cancer. As announced on April 10, 2008, PDL anticipates its 2008 royalty revenues to be $240 million ...PDLI - DNA
OSI Pharmaceuticals profits rise on cancer drug sales
Newsday, NY - May 7, 2008
OSI said total worldwide sales of Tarceva were approximately $267 million in the quarter, a 35 percent increase compared to the same period last year. ...
OSI shares rise after posting 1Q profit on cancer drug sales Houston Chronicle
all 9 news articles »  OSIP
Live Strong For Us All
Sunday Paper, GA - May 11, 2008
Of course, cancer isn?t only for kids. Statistics say 1.4 million Americans are expected to be diagnosed with cancer and 560000 to die from it this year ...

Wall Street Journal Blogs
2nd UPDATE:Ranbaxy Signs Drug Discovery,Devt Pact With Merck
CNNMoney.com -
BY), to discover and develop new cancer drugs. Ranbaxy, which is India's largest pharmaceutical firm by revenue, has a similar tie-up with GlaxoSmithKline ...
Merck, Ranbaxy Team Up To Develop Anti-Infectives Wall Street Journal
Ranbaxy, Merck pop pact pill Calcutta Telegraph
all 58 news articles »  OTC:RBXLY - MRK
Source: Google News

Breast cancer and hormone-replacement therapy: the Million Women Study -
V Beral, E Banks, G Reeves, D Bull - The Lancet, 2003 - Elsevier
... state that findings from the Million Women Study ... HRT-associated risks of breast cancer
when compared ... from the collaborative reanalysis of the worldwide data 1 ...

Global Cancer Statistics, 2002 -
DM Parkin, F Bray, J Ferlay, P Pisani - CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2005 - Am Cancer Soc
... Estimates of the worldwide incidence, mortality and prevalence of ... of the International
Agency for Research on Cancer. ... Overall, there were 10.9 million new cases ...

Estimates of the worldwide mortality from 25 cancers in 1990 -
P Pisani, DM Parkin, F Bray, J Ferlay? - International Journal of Cancer, 1999 - biij.org
... pisani@iarc.fr We present here worldwide estimates of ... from all cancers and for 25
specific cancer sites around ... Of the estimated 5.2 million deaths from cancer ...

Mortality by cause for eight regions of the world: Global Burden of Disease Study. -
CJ Murray, AD Lopez - Lancet, 1997 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
... Worldwide, the 10 leading causes of death in 1990--accounting for ... measles (1.1 million),
road-traffic accidents (1.0 million), and lung cancer (0.9 million ...

Estimates of the worldwide mortality from eighteen major cancers in 1985. Implications for … -
P Pisani, DM Parkin, J Ferlay - Int J Cancer, 1993 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
... This report presents worldwide estimates of annual mortality from ... cancers and for
18 specific cancer sites around ... Of the estimated 5 million deaths from cancer ...

Estimates of the worldwide incidence of eighteen major cancers in 1985. -
DM Parkin, P Pisani, J Ferlay - Int J Cancer, 1993 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
... excluding non-melanoma skin cancer) was 7.6 million, 52% of ... in the world today is
lung cancer, accounting for 17.6% of cancers of men worldwide, and 22% of ...

… Canadians of European, south Asian and Chinese origin from 1979 to 1993 an analysis of 1.2 million -
T Sheth, C Nair, M Nargundkar, S Anand, S Yusuf - Canadian Medical Association Journal, 1999 - Can Med Assoc
... an analysis of 1.2 million deaths. ... Abstract. Background: Cardiovascular disease and
cancer are important health problems worldwide, yet our knowledge ...

Height, Body Mass Index, and Ovarian Cancer: A Follow-Up of 1.1 Million Norwegian Women -
A Engeland, S Tretli, T Bjorge - jnci, 2003 - jnci.oxfordjournals.org
... risk in a Norwegian cohort of approximately 1.1 million women, aged 14 ... 1990, ovarian
cancer was the sixth most common cancer among women worldwide (1). In ...

Overweight and Obesity Worldwide now Estimated to Involve 1.7 Billion People -
M Deitel - Obesity Surgery, 2003 - Springer
... significant proportion of the 3.6 billion Asian population ... bearing joints, many forms
of cancer, poor quality ... worldwide >2.5 million deaths per year are weight ...

Global and regional estimates of cancer mortality and incidence by site: II. results for the global … -
K Shibuya, CD Mathers, C Boschi-Pinto, AD Lopez, … - feedback, 2004 - biomedcentral.com
... total mortality) and more than 10 million new cases ... Pisani P, et al.: Globocan 2000:
Cancer Incidence, Mortality and Prevalence Worldwide, Version 1.0 ...

Source: Google Scholar

New report estimates 12 million cancer cases worldwide

ATLANTA, December 17, 2007—A new American Cancer Society report estimates that there will be over 12 million new cancer cases and 7.6 million cancer deaths (about 20,000 cancer deaths a day) worldwide in 2007. The estimate comes from the first-ever Global Cancer Facts & Figures, the latest addition to the American Cancer Society’s family of Facts & Figures publications. The report estimates that 5.4 million of those cancers and 2.9 million deaths will occur in economically developed countries, while 6.7 million cases and 4.7 million deaths will occur in economically developing countries. These projections were based on incidence and mortality data from the Globocan 2002 database compiled by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC).

In economically developed countries, the three most commonly diagnosed cancers in men are prostate, lung, and colorectal cancer. Among women, they are breast, colorectal, and lung cancer. In contrast, the three most commonly diagnosed cancers in economically developing countries are cancers of the lung, stomach, and liver in men, and cancers of the breast, cervix uteri, and stomach in women. In developing countries, two of the three leading cancers in men (stomach and liver) and in women (cervix and stomach) are related to infection. In both economically developed and developing countries, the three most common cancer sites are also the three leading causes of cancer death.

Approximately 15 percent of all cancers worldwide are infection-related, with the percentage of cancers related to infection about three times higher in developing than in developed countries (26 percent versus 8 percent). “The burden of cancer is increasing in developing countries as deaths from infectious diseases and childhood mortality decline and more people live to older ages when cancer most frequently occurs,” said Ahmedin Jemal, PhD, American Cancer Society epidemiologist and co-author of the report. “This cancer burden is also increasing as people in the developing countries adopt western lifestyles such as cigarette smoking, higher consumption of saturated fat and calorie-dense foods, and reduced physical activity.”

The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) estimates that in 2002 there were approximately 24.6 million people worldwide who had been diagnosed with cancer in the past five years. Survival rates for many cancers are poorer in economically developing countries than in developed countries largely because of lack of availability of early detection and treatment services. For example, overall five-year childhood cancer survival rates are around 75 percent in Europe and North America, compared to three-year survival rates of only 48 to 62 percent in Central American countries.

Special Section: The Tobacco Epidemic

The publication includes a special section on tobacco’s increasing toll. An estimated five million people worldwide died from tobacco use in the year 2000. Of these, about 30 percent (1.42 million) resulted from cancer, with 850,000 deaths from lung cancer alone. Overall, tobacco was responsible for about 100 million deaths around the world during the 20th century, and it is projected to kill more than 1 billion people in the 21st century, with the great majority of these deaths occurring in developing countries. The report says halting the rapid diffusion of tobacco consumption to developing countries is an urgent global health priority.

The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that approximately 84 percent of the approximately 1.3 billion smokers in the world live in countries with a developing or transitional economy. In China alone, there are 350 million smokers, more than the entire population of the U.S. If current smoking prevalence patterns continue, there will be two billion smokers worldwide by the year 2030, half of whom will die of smoking-related diseases if they do not quit.

###

The American Cancer Society is dedicated to eliminating cancer as a major health problem by saving lives, diminishing suffering and preventing cancer through research, education, advocacy and service. Founded in 1913 and with national headquarters in Atlanta, the Society has 13 regional Divisions and local offices in 3,400 communities, involving millions of volunteers across the United States. For more information anytime, call toll free 1-800-ACS-2345 or visit www.cancer.org.

 
 
 
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