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About 600,000 new cases of lung
cancer.(File Photo)
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BEIJING,
April 23 (Xinhuanet) -- The total of cancer cases in Asia is projected to
balloon from 4.5 million in 2002 to 7.1 in 2020, straining health systems
in countries that can least afford it, according to experts quoted by media
Monday.
Speaking at Lancet Asia Medical Forum in
Singapore, Richard Horton, editor of the British medical journal Lancet,
warned Asia -- which already has most of the world's stomach and liver
cancer cases -- may account for about 58 percent of all cancer cases in the
world by then.
Donald Maxwell Parkin, a research fellow at Oxford
University in Britain, also stated that Asia may account for about 65 percent of
all cancer cases by 2050.
"Population growth will increase the number of
cases," Parkin said at the start of the
two-day forum.
Once considered a disease of
wealthy nations, cancer is increasingly afflicting developing countries due to
tobacco and alcohol abuse, unhealthy diets and the lack of exercise, experts
said.
Cancer of the lungs, stomach and liver are
the biggest problems in Asia followed by breast and colon cancers, they
noted.
"This will put a tremendous burden
on patients, their families and the health care system in each country," said
Khaw Boon Wan, Singapore's minister of health.
"Singapore will not be spared. Cancer is already
our top killer and we are bracing ourselves for the disease burden to increase
as our population ages," he warned.
(Agencies)