Ashktorab Hassan, Kupfer Sonia S, Brim Hassan, Carethers John M
Department of Medicine, Howard University, Washington, District of Columbia; Cancer Center, Howard University, Washington, District of Columbia.
Section of Gastroenterology, Department of Medicine, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois.
Gastroenterology. 2017 Oct;153(4):910-923. doi: 10.1053/j.gastro.2017.08.018. Epub 2017 Aug 12.
Cancer from the gastrointestinal tract and its associated excretory organs will occur in more than 300,000 Americans in 2017, with colorectal cancer responsible for >40% of that burden; there will be more than 150,000 deaths from this group of cancers in the same time period. Disparities among subgroups related to the incidence and mortality of these cancers exist. The epidemiology and risk factors associated with each cancer bear out differences for racial groups in the United States. Esophageal adenocarcinoma is more frequent in non-Hispanic whites, whereas esophageal squamous cell carcinoma with risk factors of tobacco and alcohol is more frequent among blacks. Liver cancer has been most frequent among Asian/Pacific Islanders, chiefly due to hepatitis B vertical transmission, but other racial groups show increasing rates due to hepatitis C and emergence of cirrhosis from non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. Gastric cancer incidence remains highest among Asian/Pacific Islanders likely due to gene-environment interaction. In addition to esophageal squamous cell carcinoma, cancers of the small bowel, pancreas, and colorectum show the highest rates among blacks, where the explanations for the disparity are not as obvious and are likely multifactorial, including socioeconomic and health care access, treatment, and prevention (vaccination and screening) differences, dietary and composition of the gut microbiome, as well as biologic and genetic influences. Cognizance of these disparities in gastrointestinal cancer risk, as well as approaches that apply precision medicine methods to populations with the increased risk, may reduce the observed disparities for digestive cancers.
2017年,超过30万美国人将罹患源自胃肠道及其相关排泄器官的癌症,其中结直肠癌占这一负担的40%以上;同期,这组癌症将导致超过15万人死亡。这些癌症在亚组间的发病率和死亡率存在差异。与每种癌症相关的流行病学和风险因素表明,美国不同种族群体存在差异。食管腺癌在非西班牙裔白人中更为常见,而具有烟草和酒精风险因素的食管鳞状细胞癌在黑人中更为常见。肝癌在亚裔/太平洋岛民中最为常见,主要是由于乙肝垂直传播,但其他种族群体因丙肝以及非酒精性脂肪性肝病导致的肝硬化发病率也在上升。胃癌发病率在亚裔/太平洋岛民中仍然最高,这可能是由于基因-环境相互作用。除了食管鳞状细胞癌,小肠癌、胰腺癌和结直肠癌在黑人中的发病率最高,造成这种差异的原因并不那么明显,可能是多因素的,包括社会经济和医疗保健可及性、治疗和预防(疫苗接种和筛查)差异、饮食和肠道微生物群组成,以及生物学和遗传影响。认识到胃肠道癌症风险的这些差异,以及将精准医学方法应用于高风险人群的方法,可能会减少观察到的消化系统癌症差异。