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(HealthNewsDigest.com) – WASHINGTON, DC – According to just-released figures from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2.4 million more Americans became obese between 2007 and 2009. Approximately 26.7 percent of the US adult population, or 72.5 million people, are now obese. Experts at the American Institute for Cancer Research (AICR) said today that this increase may well result in a corresponding increase in the national cancer rate in years to come.
The AICR experts pointed out that those 72.5 million Americans face an increased risk for colorectal cancer, postmenopausal breast cancer, kidney cancer, esophageal cancer, endometrial cancer, pancreatic cancer and gallbladder cancer.
“Obesity plays a central role in many cancers,” said AICR Director of Research Susan Higginbotham, PhD, RD. “Its links to heart disease and diabetes are well-known, but Americans need to understand that more obesity today means more cancer tomorrow.”
AICR currently estimates that excess body fat causes approximately 103,600 cases of cancer in the US every year, and warns that as the percentage of the population who are obese continues to increase, this number will rise.
The 103,600 estimate was calculated by combining projected cancer incidence for 2010 with data on the prevalence of obesity and its impact on cancer risk found in the AICR/WCRF report, Policy and Action for Cancer Prevention, released last year. That report estimated the percentage of various kinds of cancer that are attributable to such risk factors as poor diet, lack of physical activity and excess body fat.
According to AICR, the estimated number of US cancers that are currently linked to excess body fat include:
49% of endometrial cancers = 21,300 cases/year
35% of esophageal cancers
= 5,824 cases/year
28% of pancreatic cancers = 12,079 cases/year
24% of kidney cancers
= 13,978 cases/year
21% of gallbladder cancers
= 2,050 cases/year
17 % of breast cancers
= 35,540 cases/year
9% of colorectal cancers
= 12,831 cases/year
TOTAL: 103,602 cases/year
“It’s clearer than ever that efforts to prevent obesity also help to prevent cancer,” said Higginbotham. “The need for action has never been more urgent.”
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