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Cancer occurrence in developing countries

TLDR
This work presents material from hospital or pathology-based registries serving a single center or region for 73 populations in 43 developing countries, including Africa, Asia, Latin America, and Oceania, with enormous diversity of patterns revealed.
Abstract
Knowledge of the geographical distribution of cancer remains incomplete. The preferred measures of occurrence are incidence and mortality rates, but in countries where this information is unobtainable alternative sources of data must be found. This work presents material from hospital or pathology-based registries serving a single center or region for 73 populations in 43 developing countries, including Africa, Asia, Latin America, and Oceania. Standardized tables give the distribution of cases by sex, age and site, each accompanied by a description of the registry, the sources of data, and the bias of selection. Age-standardized cancer ratios as well as crude and age-standardized incidence rates are given where possible. The enormous diversity of patterns revealed will cause much fruitful speculation over causes of cancer and possibilities of prevention.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Cancer burden in the year 2000. The global picture.

TL;DR: Three elementary measures of cancer frequency are confined ourselves to: incidence, mortality and prevalence.
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Estimates of the worldwide incidence of 25 major cancers in 1990

TL;DR: There are large differences in the relative frequency of different cancers by world area, and tobacco smoking and chewing are almost certainly the major preventable causes of cancer today.
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Estimates of the worldwide incidence of eighteen major cancers in 1985.

TL;DR: The annual incidence rates and numbers of new cases of 18 different cancers have been estimated for the year 1985 in 24 areas of the world and tobacco smoking and chewing are almost certainly the major prevent able causes of cancer today.
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Epidemiology of hepatocellular carcinoma.

TL;DR: The incidence of primary liver cancer is increasing in several developed countries including the United States, and the increase will likely continue for several decades.
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Estimates of the worldwide frequency of sixteen major cancers in 1980.

TL;DR: The numbers of new cancer cases in 16 common sites occurring in 1980 have been estimated and it is suggested that, with declining incidence rates for stomach cancer and the continuing rise for lung cancer, the latter would become the most common cancer in the world by the end of 1981.
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