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Query: UMLS:C0024623 (gastric cancer)
36,219 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

California has 12% of the U.S. population. In 1991, the newly diagnosed cancer cases in California represented 10% of all new cancer cases in the country, and the yearly toll was 10% of all cancer deaths. Relative to all new cancer cases in the U.S., California had 10, 9.8, 9.8, and 9.3% of breast, lung, prostate, and colorectal cancers, respectively. Because of its large population and cancer incidence, the epidemiology of cancer in California is of particular interest. Epidemiological factors reviewed in this article include ethnicity, lifestyle, occupation, and environmental conditions. Ethnic factors: There is an increased incidence of cervical and gallbladder cancer among Hispanic women, and of stomach cancer in Hispanic men and women. In U.S.-born Chinese men, the most prevalent cancers are those of the lung and colon, which is also seen in American white men. In U.S.-born Chinese women, there is an upward displacement of breast cancer incidence. In U.S.-born Japanese men and women, the mortality rate is closer to that of American whites. Life-style: Members of the Mormon Church and Seventh-Day Adventists have only 50% of the U.S. standardized mortality rate for cancer associated with smoking. Increased coffee consumption has been found to be associated with increased occurrence of colon and bladder cancer; alcohol use has been reported to have a positive association with colorectal cancer. The large AIDS population in San Francisco has a 144-fold odds ratio of Kaposi's sarcoma and a fivefold odds ratio of lymphoma when compared with the general U.S. population. Occupational factors: An increased incidence of mesothelioma in asbestos workers, of gastric cancer, skin cancer, and lymphoma in men working in dusty environments, and of astrocytoma in individuals with prolonged exposure to low-frequency electric and magnetic fields has been recorded. Environmental factors: The drinking-water pool in northern California is contaminated with asbestos of the serpentine type, which is associated with mesothelioma of the peritoneum and carcinoma of the lung, gallbladder, and pancreas. Petrochemical fumes in the heavily industrialized San Francisco Bay area have not been associated with an increased occurrence of cancer. No significant incidence in cancer has been noted in the counties surrounding the nuclear power plant at San Onofre during 18 years of close observation.
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PMID:Epidemiological factors of cancer in California. 146 11

A retrospective cohort study was carried out on asbestos workers who had received health examinations in 1972 to 1974 conducted by the Osaka Health Center. The subjects, total of 789 (329 males, 460 females) were followed-up for 10 years (Jan. 1, 1975-Dec. 31, 1984). There were sixty-one deaths in the cohort--4 tuberculosis, 12 malignant neoplasms (4 stomach cancers, 8 respiratory cancers including one case of pleural mesothelioma), 18 circulatory diseases, 24 respiratory diseases, and 3 other causes of death. Standardized mortality ratio (SMR) was calculated age and sex-specific death rates for the general population in Osaka between 1975-79 and 1980-84. SMR for all causes of death, stomach cancer, respiratory cancer, circulatory diseases, and respiratory diseases were 1.15, 3.29, 0.75, 3.88, 0.93 and 8.63 respectively. Respiratory cancer and respiratory diseases showed statistically significant (p less than 0.01) excess death with a mean death age of 59 and 56 years old respectively.
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PMID:[A retrospective cohort study of workers in small asbestos industries in south Osaka]. 195 74

The separate and combined effects of duration and intensity of exposure to crocidolite on mortality from lung cancer, malignant mesothelioma, and stomach cancer were examined in 6506 male former crocidolite miners and millers at Wittenoom Gorge, Western Australia. Each subject who had died from lung cancer (92), mesothelioma (31), or stomach cancer (17) was matched with up to 20 control subjects of the same age who were not known to have died before the index subject. Relations of dose and time of exposure to crocidolite to risk of death were modelled by conditional logistic regression. For lung cancer, the best fitting multiplicative model was one which estimated a relative risk (RR) of 1.12 (95% CI 1.04-1.20) per year of exposure and 1.01 (95% CI 1.00-1.01) per fibre/ml. This was statistically indistinguishable from an additive model showing an increase in RR of 0.01045 (95% CI 0.008-0.020) per f/ml year. For mesothelioma the best fitting model appeared to be one estimating a RR of 24.9 (95% CI 3.51-1.77) per log year since first exposed and a RR of 10.5 (95% CI 3.12-35.1) if exposed for longer than six months. This was not distinguishable statistically from a model that showed mortality increasing as the fourth power of time since first exposed less the fourth power of time since last exposed. The effect of intensity of exposure on the RR for mesothelioma was only slight. There was no consistent effect of any measure of exposure to crocidolite on death from stomach cancer.
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PMID:Cancer mortality in relation to measures of occupational exposure to crocidolite at Wittenoom Gorge in Western Australia. 255 48

The mortality experience of 1074 white men who retired from a United States asbestos company during the period 1941-67 and who were exposed to asbestos working as production and maintenance employees for the company is reported to the end of 1980 when 88% of this cohort was known to be dead. As noted in earlier reports the mortality for respiratory and gastrointestinal cancer was raised. A more detailed examination of causes of death shows that the excess in gastrointestinal cancer was largely due to a statistically significant excess in stomach cancer. A statistically significant excess was also noted for kidney cancer, cancer of the eye, and non-malignant respiratory disease. Eight deaths from malignant mesothelioma were observed, two of which were peritoneal. Asbestos exposures for these mesothelioma cases were low relative to other members of the cohort. Continuing follow up of this cohort shows a dose response relation for respiratory cancer that has become increasingly linear. Standardised mortality ratios peaked 10 to 15 years after retirement and were relatively constant at around 250 in each five year interval starting in 1950. This excess might have been detected as early as 1960 but certainly by 1965. The mortality experience of this cohort reflects the ultimate effects of asbestos since nearly all of the cohort has now died.
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PMID:Asbestos and cancer: a cohort followed up to death. 360 68

To determine whether exposure to crocidolite is associated with excess mortality, the authors calculated standardized mortality ratios based on deaths in South African crocidolite mining districts from 1968 to 1980 for selected causes of death. Contiguous districts were used as controls. To take account of background geographic variability, they divided the control districts into groups of population size similar to those of the crocidolite mining districts. Standardized mortality ratios in crocidolite mining districts were elevated for asbestosis and/or mesothelioma, and cancer of the lung and stomach. These findings could not be explained by background geographic variability in mortality and are likely to be due to exposure to South African crocidolite during mining and milling or to environmental contamination. The increased standardized mortality ratios for stomach cancer are of particular interest, since excess deaths have not previously been shown in individuals exposed to crocidolite alone.
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PMID:Excess mortality from stomach cancer, lung cancer, and asbestosis and/or mesothelioma in crocidolite mining districts in South Africa. 394 Apr 41

The main features of occupational industrial respiratory diseases in Switzerland can be summarized as follows: -Silicosis: 9750 cases from 1930 to 1979. At present low annual incidence (less than 100 cases), age at first diagnosis over 40 years, at death almost 70 years. - Asbestosis: 130 cases from 1939 to 1979. 30 cases of mesothelioma (21 without asbestosis; 9 with), 9 of bronchial carcinoma and 1 of gastric cancer in the 130 cases of asbestosis. - Acute toxic lung (irritant gases such as chlorine, phosgene, nitrous gases), occupational asthma, extrinsic alveolitis and finally occupational chronic bronchitis are the principal diseases also observed.
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PMID:[Current occupational respiratory pathology in Switzerland]. 707 2

The cancer incidence among asbestos workers in the Sennan District and its surrounding of Osaka Prefecture, Japan, and the results of a mass survey in the above area since 1957 were evaluated from view points of epidemiology. During the period from 1953 to 1979, 107 patients with asbestosis were admitted to this Hospital. Twenty-six (24%) of them died of various carcinoma; 21 had lung cancer, 2 pleural mesothelioma and 3 had stomach cancer. Respiratory insufficiency due to pulmonary asbestosis was responsible for 41 deaths (38%). by a cohort survey of the 297 asbestos workers in the same district, 4 cases of lung cancer, and 3 cases of gastric cancer were detected and cases of cohort survey were followed up for 19 years. Fifty-seven (10%) of 556 cases of silicosis and 14 (11%) of 125 cases of pneumoconiosis other than silicosis or asbestosis were found to have lung cancer, but no mesothelioma. These results indicate that lung cancer and mesothelioma are associated more frequently with asbestosis than with non-asbestos pneumoconiosis (p less than 0.001 as tested by chi2-test). The standardized mortality ratio of lung and stomach cancer among the inhabitants of the Sennan District was calculated based on the statistics during the period of 10 years (1968-1977). the ratio of observed death to expected death of both cancers was smaller than 1.1, and there was no significant increase of death of lung and stomach cancer, although the risk of lung cancer tended to increase among male inhabitants. Discussions were made on the problems related to asbestos industry.
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PMID:Asbestos and cancer in the Sennan District of Osaka. 731 84

An overview of published information on occupational cancer and recorded ongoing occupational cancer research in developing countries is presented. The main cancers reported, of possible occupational origin, are skin carcinoma, leukemia due to exposure to benzene, asbestos-caused mesothelioma, vinyl chloride-induced hepatic angiosarcoma, carcinoma of bilharzial urinary bladder, stomach cancer reportedly associated with nitrogen fertilizers, lung cancer of nickel smelters, and nasopharyngeal and pulmonary carcinoma in workers exposed to the dust of hard wood. The difficulties of developing efficient occupational cancer prevention are discussed. Some options are analyzed regarding legislative, technological, environmental, medical, administrative, and educational cancer control applicable under conditions of developing countries.
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PMID:Problems of occupational carcinogenesis in developing countries. 734 83

Infection by bacteria, parasites or viruses and tissue inflammation such as gastritis, hepatitis and colitis are recognized risk factors for human cancers at various sites. Nitric oxide (NO) and other oxygen radicals produced in infected and inflamed tissues could contribute to the process of carcinogenesis by different mechanisms, which are discussed on the basis of authors' studies on liver fluke infection and cholangiocarcinoma development. A similar mechanism could apply to other suspected and known cancer-causing agents including Helicobacter pylori infection (stomach cancer) or asbestos exposure (lung mesothelioma). Studies on the type of tissue and DNA damage produced by NO and by other reactive oxygen species are shedding new light on the molecular mechanisms by which chronic inflammatory processes may initiate or enhance carcinogenesis in humans.
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PMID:Chronic infections and inflammatory processes as cancer risk factors: possible role of nitric oxide in carcinogenesis. 751 36

Through a period of 16 years, 108 cases of early gastric cancer (EGC) were diagnosed at Hospital Mexico, a leading teaching hospital of Costa Rica's social security system and the University of Costa Rica. It was found that in four cases, the gastric neoplasia was a second primary tumor, and in the two remaining cases, the EGC developed synchronously to another neoplasm. Two of the four metachronic EGC were preceded by a uterine cervix neoplasm on stage lla; the third one was preceded by a breast adenocarcinoma, and the fourth one by a larynx cancer in a heavy male smoker. The treatment received for the first cancer was radiation therapy only, except for the breast cancer patient in whom surgery was employed as well. One of the patients with uterine cervix cancer developed an epidermoid bronchogenic cancer 17 years after the first tumor and 8 years after her EGC. In the two male patients with synchro tumors, the EGC developed together with a squasmous cell carcinoma of esophagus, and in the remaining one the EGC appeared simultaneously with a peritoneal mesothelioma. It is important to emphasize the presence of radiation therapy in the metachronous tumors, as well as the antecedent of smoking in the patient with three primary cancers, the esophagus one, and the larynx cancer patient.
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PMID:[Early gastric cancer as a metachronic or synchronic tumor. Report of 6 cases]. 756 50


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