Estimates of the worldwide incidence of 25 major cancers in 1990

The annual incidence rates (crude and age‐standardized) and numbers of new cases of 25 different cancers have been estimated for the year 1990 in 23 areas of the world. The total number of new cancer cases (excluding non‐melanoma skin cancer) was 8.1 million, just over half of which occur in the developing countries. The most common cancer in the world today is lung cancer, accounting for 18% of cancers of men worldwide, and 21% of cancers in men in the developed countries. Stomach cancer is second in frequency (almost 10% of all new cancers) and breast cancer, by far the most common cancer among women (21% of the total), is third. There are large differences in the relative frequency of different cancers by world area. The major cancers of developed countries (other than the 3 already named) are cancers of the colon‐rectum and prostate, and in developing countries, cancers of the cervix uteri and esophagus. The implications of these patterns for cancer control, and specifically prevention, are discussed. Tobacco smoking and chewing are almost certainly the major preventable causes of cancer today.Int. J. Cancer 80:827–841, 1999. © 1999 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.

[1]  D M Parkin,et al.  Cancer incidence and mortality in the European Union: cancer registry data and estimates of national incidence for 1990. , 1997, European journal of cancer.

[2]  J. Ferlay,et al.  Cancer Incidence in Five Continents , 1970, Union Internationale Contre Le Cancer / International Union against Cancer.

[3]  R. Sankaranarayanan Health care auxiliaries in the detection and prevention of oral cancer. , 1997, Oral oncology.

[4]  D. Parkin,et al.  Cancer incidence in Ho Chi Minh City, Viet Nam, 1995–1996 , 1998, International journal of cancer.

[5]  B. Stepowski [Control of cancer of the cervix uteri]. , 1953, Ginekologia polska.

[6]  P C Prorok,et al.  Evaluation of screening programmes for gynaecological cancer. , 1985, British Journal of Cancer.

[7]  Alan D. Lopez,et al.  Mortality by cause for eight regions of the world: Global Burden of Disease Study , 1997, The Lancet.

[8]  D. Parkin,et al.  Cancer incidence in Western Samoa. , 1991, International journal of epidemiology.

[9]  D M Parkin,et al.  Estimates of the worldwide frequency of sixteen major cancers in 1980 , 1988, International journal of cancer.

[10]  J. Ferlay,et al.  Estimates of the worldwide incidence of eighteen major cancers in 1985 , 1993, International journal of cancer.

[11]  Control of oral cancer in developing countries. A WHO meeting. , 1984, Bulletin of the World Health Organization.

[12]  V. Beral,et al.  Cancer in Rwanda , 1996, International journal of cancer.

[13]  A. Polednak,et al.  Cancer in Haiti 1979–84: Distribution of various forms of cancer according to geographical area and sex , 1986, International journal of cancer.

[14]  B. Lindtjørn Cancer in southern Ethiopia. , 1987, The Journal of tropical medicine and hygiene.

[15]  D. Parkin,et al.  Cancer in Iraq: Seven years' data from the Baghdad tumour registry , 1984, International journal of cancer.

[16]  N. Paksoy Frequency of thyroid cancer in Pacific populations. , 1992, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

[17]  D. M. Parkin,et al.  Cancer incidence in Conakry, Guinea: first results from the cancer registry 1992–1995 , 1997, International journal of cancer.

[18]  R. Sankaranarayanan,et al.  Cancer in Gabon, 1984-1993: a pathology registry based relative frequency study. , 1996, Bulletin du cancer.

[19]  D. Parkin,et al.  Cancer occurrence in developing countries , 1986 .

[20]  J. Ferlay,et al.  Cancer deaths in India: is the model-based approach valid? , 1994, Bulletin of the World Health Organization.

[21]  C. Muir,et al.  Estimates of the worldwide frequency of twelve major cancers. , 1984, Bulletin of the World Health Organization.

[22]  S. Preston Mortality Patterns in National Populations , 1976 .

[23]  K. Jayant Cancers of the cervix uteri and breast: changes in incidence rates in Bombay over the last two decades. , 1986, Bulletin of the World Health Organization.