Affiliation:
1. Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Ministry of Education Key Lab of Environment and Health, School of Public Health, Tongji Medical College Huazhong University of Science and Technology Wuhan Hubei China
2. Shenzhen Center for Chronic Disease Control Shenzhen Guangdong China
3. Hubei Cancer Hospital, Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Science and Technology Hubei Provincial Clinical Research Center for Colorectal Cancer Wuhan Hubei China
4. Wuhan Clinical Research Center for Colorectal cancer Wuhan Hubei China
Abstract
AbstractThe cancer burden in China is increasing. We aimed to assess the time trends in the prevalence of 16 modifiable risk factors involved in lifestyle, diet, infection, and air pollution between 1997 and 2025 based on the China Health and Nutrition Survey, the Global Burden of Disease website, and publically available studies. The population attributable fraction (PAF) and its 95% uncertainty interval (UI) from 2007 to 2035 were calculated to quantify the attributable cancer burden in major 12 anatomic sites using the comparative risk assessment method, considering a 10‐year lag effect. As a result, 1,559,476 cancer cases (PAF = 54.1%, 95% UI: 36.8%–65.8%) from the 12 anatomic sites were attributable to these modifiable risk factors in 2007, with lung, liver, and gastric cancer raging the top three. It was predicted that by 2035, the attributable cancer cases would reach 1,680,098 (PAF = 44.2%, 95% UI: 29.1%–55.5%), with the top three of lung, liver, and colorectal cancer. Smoking, physical inactivity, insufficient fruit consumption, HBV infection, and Helicobacter pylori infection were the most attributable risk factors in 2007, contributing to 480,352, 233,684, 215,009, 214,455, and 187,305 associated cancer cases, respectively. In 2035, the leading factors for cancer would be smoking, physical inactivity, insufficient fruit intake, HPV infection, and HBV infection, resulting in 427,445, 424,327, 185,144, 156,535, and 154,368 cancer cases, respectively. Intervention strategies should be swiftly established and dynamically altered in response to risk factors like smoking, physical inactivity, poor fruit intake, and infectious factors that may cause a high cancer burden in the Chinese population.
Funder
Science, Technology and Innovation Commission of Shenzhen Municipality
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Health Commission of Hubei Province