It’s time to talk about cancer prevention — and the
role of the environment
In his 2019 State of the Union address on
Tuesday night, President Trump called for $500 million over the next 10 years
to fund research on childhood cancers.
Such funding is crucial
to continue tackling the devastating disease.
However, missing from the State of the Union—and most other conversations about tackling cancer—is a focus on prevention, specifically the need to research, understand and communicate the role environmental exposures play in cancer risk.
However, missing from the State of the Union—and most other conversations about tackling cancer—is a focus on prevention, specifically the need to research, understand and communicate the role environmental exposures play in cancer risk.
EDITOR’S NOTE: Before crediting Trump for this “commitment” to fighting cancer, you should note that it only works out to $50
million a year over 10 years. That’s less than 1% of what the government
CURRENTLY spends on cancer research, according to David
Cay Johnston who adds “this vague
pledge could be reasonably seen as a plan to cut cancer research funding.”
Johnston also notes “Trump’s first budget
proposed massive cuts in cancer research funding, as even the rightwing Washington Examiner reported.” And there was Trump's $100,000 rip-off of charity money that was supposed to go to research on childhood cancer, as reported by Forbes. - Will Collette.
The numbers on cancer incidence and deaths are complex. Although childhood cancer mortality rates have dropped considerably from the 1960s, data from the American Cancer Society shows that incidence rates have increased 0.6 percent per year since 1975.
In this way, childhood
cancers are like several others. Between 2005 and 2014, yearly cancer incidence
rates rose for several types: thyroid cancer by 4 percent; invasive breast
cancer by 0.3 percent in black women; leukemia by 1.6 percent; liver cancer by
3 percent; oral and pharynx cancers by 1 percent in Caucasians; pancreatic
cancer by 1 percent in Caucasians; colon cancer by 1.4 percent in individuals
younger than 55 years of age; rectal cancer by 2.4 percent in individuals
younger than 55; and melanoma by 3 percent in individuals aged 50 and older.
While these cancer rates
have increased, overall rates of cancer deaths have started to fall. In fact,
since the 1990s, improved detection and treatment, as well as decreased smoking rates, have contributed to
significant reductions in cancer mortality.
Reduced deaths from
cancer are a great public health victory. These statistics prove that public
health interventions like educational programs
designed to curb smoking can have dramatic effects.
They also suggest that investments in improved detection and diagnosis are money well spent. A focus on treatments has also improved quality of life for cancer patients and their likelihood of remission.
But where is the call
for better cancer prevention? As rates of numerous cancers continue to rise,
the failure to identify the causes of cancer remains a
disappointment for public health officials and researchers alike.
We know that
environmental factors can contribute to cancer risk. Some, like smoking, are
avoidable. Others are lifestyle factors that people can change like drinking
less alcohol, decreasing consumption of processed meats, using protection from
the sun, and increasing exercise.
Yet, other environmental
factors like exposures to chemicals in the environment, including endocrine disruptors, have received little
attention.
While some NIH-funded programs like the Breast Cancer and Environment Research Program have worked to identify chemicals in the environment that promote cancer, funding for cancer prevention initiatives has stagnated.
While some NIH-funded programs like the Breast Cancer and Environment Research Program have worked to identify chemicals in the environment that promote cancer, funding for cancer prevention initiatives has stagnated.
Despite the limited
resources invested in studies of environmental risk factors for cancer, we know
enough to take action on some chemicals of concern.
For example, communities
contaminated with perfluorinated chemicals,
several of which are known to cause cancer, have demanded attention
from government officials in addition to asking for more research.
Individuals living in
these communities have the right to know how they are being exposed, and what
their risks might be – for cancer and other diseases.
It is great that cancer
research was raised in the President's State of the Union speech, and that the
difficulties associated with caring for a family member with cancer was
mentioned in Stacey Abrams' rebuttal.
But a failure to focus
on prevention, a failure to acknowledge the role of the environment in causing
cancer, and a failure to allocate funds to prevention research, are all
failures for public health.
Dr. Vandenberg is an
Associate Professor of Environmental Health Sciences at the University of
Massachusetts Amherst School of Public Health and Health Sciences. Her work on
endocrine disrupting chemicals has been funded by the National Institutes of
Health including the BCERP program, which focuses on the environmental causes
of breast cancer.