Overview
- Editors:
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Pelayo Correa
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Louisiana State University Medical Center, New Orleans, USA
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William Haenszel
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Illinois Cancer Council, University of Illinois and Senior Epidemiologist, Chicago, USA
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Table of contents (10 chapters)
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- Nicholas E. Day, Nubia Muñoz, Parviz Ghadirian
Pages 21-57
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- Pelayo Correa, William Haenszel
Pages 59-84
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- William Haenszel, Pelayo Correa
Pages 85-126
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- Charles B. Pratt, Stephen L. George
Pages 127-146
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- Nubia Muñoz, Allen Linsell
Pages 161-195
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- Thomas M. Mack, Herman R. Menck
Pages 227-242
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Back Matter
Pages 261-264
About this book
The digestive organs are the most frequent site of cancer in the world, accounting for approximately 30% of all malignant tumors. This prominent position has been present for many decades in spite of marked shifts in the freq uency of cancer of specific organs. The most remarkable shift has been the decrease in gastric cancer rates occurring concomitantly with an increase in colon cancer rates in most 'western' industrialized societies. Important exceptions to this rule, as well as other epidemiologic evidence, indicate that the opposite trends for gastric and colon cancers are not inevitable consequences of each other. Although genetic ally determined precancerous syndromes are well recognized, it is generally agreed that environmental factors play an overriding role in digestive cancer causation. The most obvious environmental factors seem to be the result of what we eat, drink, or smoke. Although the nutritional component of the diet is of unquestionable importance, the nonnutrient elements in our diet have also proven to be influential causative factors. Several studies have focused on the microenvironment at the level of the mucosa or the digestive organs as a micro cosmos where forces promoting and inhibiting carcinogenesis are operating for a prolonged period of time. Their interaction eventually determines the presence or absence of a malignant tumor. Our understanding of such modulating forces, hopefully, will someday allow us to modify the microenvironment in a favorable way and attain the goal of cancer prevention.
Editors and Affiliations
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Louisiana State University Medical Center, New Orleans, USA
Pelayo Correa
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Illinois Cancer Council, University of Illinois and Senior Epidemiologist, Chicago, USA
William Haenszel