In India, 1.4 million people are diagnosed with cancer annually and 8,50,000 cancer patients die of it every year. Carcinoma of breast, lung, mouth, cervix, stomach and head & neck are major cancer types that are preventable but the majority of cases are diagnosed at advanced stages.
Gynaecological cancers are among the most common cancers in women and hence an important health issue. Due to the lack of cancer awareness, variable pathology, and dearth of proper screening facilities in developing countries such as India, most women report at advanced stages, adversely affecting the prognosis and clinical outcomes, says Dr. Abhishek Shankar, Associate Professor, Department of Radiation Oncology, AIIMS Patna. This is an important agenda to focus more on cancer prevention and screening to make sure that cancer patients should reach the hospital, he adds.
Screening plays a significant role in detecting cancers at an early stage before the appearance of the symptoms. In the situation, where most of the cancer cases in low and middle-income countries (LMICs) are presenting to hospitals at an advanced stage, cancer prevention and screening will be a cost-effective exercise to reduce cancer incidence and related mortality by detecting of precancerous lesions and invasive cancer at early stages.
Health Promotion Approaches for Cancer Prevention
Dr. Abhishek says that health promotion interventions can help to decrease the incidence, prevalence of Non-communicable Diseases (NCDs) including cancer. Health promotion activities as a preventive measure for cancer are focused on underlying risk factors like physical inactivity, overweight and obesity, dietary factors including fruit and vegetable intake, tobacco and alcohol use, infections, and environmental and occupational exposure.
"Physical inactivity contributes to nearly 5 percent of all cancer deaths. Many studies have reported that physical activity decreases the development of endometrial cancer and few studies. It is also estimated that 41 percent of uterine carcinoma is due to obesityand overweight and there will be an increase in cancer incidence by nearly 3800 cases with every 1 unit increase in BMI," said AIIMS Patna Doctor.
Human Papillomavirus (HPV) infection is associated with cancer of the cervix, vagina, vulva, head and neck cancer, and anal canal in females. In the case of cervical cancer, nearly 90 percent of cases have the presence of HPV and the two most commonly found strains are HPV 16 and 18.
Chemoprevention of Cancer
Oncologist Dr. Shankar says that there are many substances, medicines, compounds and agents which are used to delay or inhibit the progression of the disease, known as chemoprevention, in cancer. In recent years, the advancement and improvement of research have given more insight into cancer biology. Many of the therapeutic agents for chemoprevention, currently under trials, are debatable.