Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, New York, USA.
Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center (HICCC), Columbia University Irving Medical Center, New York, New York, USA.
J Glob Health. 2024 Oct 11;14:04205. doi: 10.7189/jogh.14.04205.
Incidence of early-onset cancers at multiple organ sites has increased worldwide in recent decades. We investigated whether such increasing trends could be explained by trends in obesity.
We obtained incidence data for 21 common cancers among 25-49-year-olds during 2000-2012 in 42 countries from the Cancer Incidence in Five Continents database. Nine cancers we examined have been classified as obesity-related by the International Agency for Research on Cancer. Estimates of overweight and obesity prevalence came from the Non-communicable Disease Risk Factor Collaboration. Using country-level data, we examined whether changes in the prevalence of overweight and obesity combined were correlated with changes in cancer incidence, after accounting for various time lags (0-15 years) between exposure and cancer diagnosis. To test the validity of our approach, we conducted negative control analyses (using non-obesity-related cancers as the outcome variable, and per-capita gross national income as the exposure variable), and sensitivity and supplemental analyses using alternative data streams or processing.
We found increased incidence for six of nine obesity-related and seven of twelve non-obesity-related cancers in 25-49-year-olds. These increases were more predominant in Western countries (particularly Australia, the USA, Canada, Norway, the Netherlands, and Lithuania). For four obesity-related cancers displaying increased incidence (colon, rectum, pancreas, kidney), changes in cancer incidence were positively correlated with changes in overweight and obesity prevalence. When accounting for a 15-year lag, the estimated correlation was 0.27 (95% confidence interval (CI) = -0.04, 0.53; P = 0.090) for colon cancer, 0.33 (95% CI = 0.02, 0.58; P = 0.036) for rectal cancer, 0.39 (95% CI = 0.08, 0.64; P = 0.018) for pancreatic cancer, and 0.22 (95% CI = -0.10, 0.50; P = 0.173) for kidney cancer. Similar correlations were found in the sensitivity and supplemental analyses. We did not find similar correlations with excess body weight for the non-obesity-related early-onset cancers, nor correlations with per-capita gross national income for any cancer types, in the negative control analyses.
Worldwide increases in early-onset colon, rectal, pancreatic, and kidney cancers may have been partly driven by increases in excess body weight. The increases in other early-onset cancers, however, were likely driven by other factors deserving of further investigation.
近年来,全球多个器官部位的早发性癌症发病率有所上升。我们研究了这些上升趋势是否可以用肥胖趋势来解释。
我们从癌症发病率五个大陆数据库中获取了 42 个国家 25-49 岁人群 2000-2012 年间 21 种常见癌症的发病率数据。国际癌症研究机构将我们检查的 9 种癌症归类为与肥胖相关。超重和肥胖患病率的估计值来自非传染性疾病风险因素合作组织。我们使用国家级数据,在考虑到暴露与癌症诊断之间的各种时间滞后(0-15 年)后,研究超重和肥胖患病率的变化是否与癌症发病率的变化相关。为了测试我们方法的有效性,我们进行了阴性对照分析(将非肥胖相关癌症作为结果变量,人均国民总收入作为暴露变量),并使用替代数据流或处理方法进行了敏感性和补充分析。
我们发现,25-49 岁人群中,9 种与肥胖相关的癌症中有 6 种和 12 种非肥胖相关癌症中的 7 种发病率上升。这些增加在西方国家更为明显(尤其是澳大利亚、美国、加拿大、挪威、荷兰和立陶宛)。对于四种发病率上升的肥胖相关癌症(结肠、直肠、胰腺、肾脏),癌症发病率的变化与超重和肥胖患病率的变化呈正相关。当考虑 15 年的滞后时,估计的相关性为 0.27(95%置信区间(CI)= -0.04,0.53;P=0.090),用于结肠直肠癌,0.33(95%CI=0.02,0.58;P=0.036),用于直肠结肠癌,0.39(95%CI=0.08,0.64;P=0.018),用于胰腺癌,0.22(95%CI=-0.10,0.50;P=0.173),用于肾癌。在敏感性和补充分析中也发现了类似的相关性。在阴性对照分析中,我们没有发现非肥胖相关早发性癌症与超重之间的类似相关性,也没有发现任何癌症类型与人均国民总收入之间的相关性。
全球范围内,结肠、直肠、胰腺和肾脏等早发性癌症的发病率上升,可能部分归因于超重的增加。然而,其他早发性癌症的增加可能是由其他值得进一步研究的因素驱动的。