Friday, January 15, 2016

Cancer Prevention: Infection, Vaccination, Screening

Cancer Prevention
~ Part II ~

Four cancer-related risk factors have been summarized in the previous article:

Here are other things that we should aware, infections that link to cancer, and cancer screening and vaccination.

5. Infections and cancer
In 1981, only two infections that have links to cancer including the hepatitis B virus (HBV) which is known to cause liver cancer, and the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) which was linked to Burkitt’s lymphoma. Today, 11 infectious agents are well established as human carcinogens. In 2008, about two million of the 12.7 million new cancer cases worldwide, which means about 16% of the total, were attribute to chronic infection.
There are seven viruses, one bacterium, and three parasitic worms that act as cancer agents.
1. Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)
A type of herpes virus which causes non-cancerous condition called infectious mononucleosis (or mono, or the kissing disease) and also associated with some forms of cancer such as Hodgkin’s lymphoma, Burkitt’s lymphoma, nasopharyngeal carcinoma, and type of lymphoma that occurs in people who undergone organ transplantation called post transplant lymphoproliferative disorder. In addition to kissing, EBV can be passed from person to person by coughing, sneezing, or by sharing drinking or eating utensils.

2. Hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV)
These two are leading causes of the hepatocellular carcinoma, the most common form of liver cancer. Both of HBV and HCV can cause the long-term (chronic) infections that increase a person’s chance of liver cancer. HBV and HCV are spread from person to person through sharing needles (such as injection drug use), unprotected sex, or childbirth. Once an infection is found, treatment and preventive measures can be used to slow liver damage and reduce cancer risk.

3. Human papilloma virus (HPV)
HPV is an interesting group of viruses with more than 100 different types. Some of them cause non-cancerous conditions such as warts on the hands and feet, and genital warts. Others are sexually transmitted, and in some cases, cause cervical cancer, cancers of the anus, vagina, penis, and vulva. 13 types out of 100 types of HPV are classified as carcinogenic. HPV type 16 and 18 are nearly always present in cervical cancer tumors and can also cause a type of throat cancer called oropharyngeal cancer. Recent research shows that oropharyngeal cancer caused by HPV infection can be considered a different form of cancer than that caused by HPV negative oropharyngeal cancer. HPV positive and HPV negative tumors develop along different molecular pathway and evidence suggests that patients with HPV positive tumors survive longer after treatment compared than those with patients with smoking related oropharyngeal carcinoma.

4. Human T-cell lymphotropic virus type 1 (HTLV-1)
This virus belogs to a class of viruses called retroviruses. Although it is something like HIV which is another human retrovirus, HTLV-1 can not cause AIDS.  It is mainly endemic in Japan, the Carribean, and Central Africa. It causes a type of lymphoma and leukemia in about 5% of the people who are infected.

5. Human Herpes virus eight (HHV-8, also known as Kaposi’s sarcoma)
Kaposi’s sarcoma is a cancer that occurs mainly in people with weakened immunities such as those with advanced AIDS or people who have undergone solid organ transplantation or bone marrow transplantation. HHV-8 infection is life-long (as with other herpes viruses), but it does not appear to cause disease in most healthy people. Thus, having a weekened immune system appears to be one such factor.

6. HIV type one
HIV does not appear to cause cancer directly. It infects and destroys white blood cells known as helper T-cells, which weakens the body’s immune system. Advanced HIV disease (AIDS) is defined by a severely damaged immune system. The loss of immunity allows preexisting latent viral infections such as Kaposi’s sarcoma, EBV, or HPV that has been suppressed by the immune system to become active. This, in turn, can lead to AIDS-defining cancers.

7. Merkel cell polyomavirus (MCV)
MCV was discovered in 2008 in samples from a rare and aggressive type of skin cancer called Merkel cell carcinoma. Nearly all Merkel cell cancers are now thought to be linked with this infection.

8. Helicobacter pylory
Helicobacter pylory is a bacterium that affects the stomach or small intestines and causes stomach cancer and gastric lymphoma, as well as gastric ulcers. Transmission occurs through close personal contact. Other factors include poverty, poor hygiene conditions, housing crowding, and the number of human children in the household. H.Pylory can lead to cancer because the infection causes chronic inflammation that induces growth and proliferation of stomach cels. This condition will alter gene excpression and facilitates gene mutation.

9. Three parasitic worms
Two of the worms are liver flukes, endemic in China, North and South Korea, and Southeast Asia. They can cause liver cancer. The flukes are transmitted through consumption of raw or undercooked infected fish includes dried, pickled, or salted fish.
The third wom is schistosomiases haematobium which is found on the African continent, and the Middle-East. It infects the upper small intestine and the bladder, causes urinary scistosomiases, an infection that can progress to bladder cancer.

6. Vaccination and Screening
Now, we have realized the importance of preventing cancer whenever possible. And then, when cancer does happen, it is most treatable if detected earlier. Vaccines are available and can protect agains two infections that are important cause of cancer worldwide. Hepatitis B virus (HBV) which is responsible for 50 to 90% of liver cancer, and Human papilloma virus (HPV) which causes virtually all cancers of the cervix and some cancers of the anus, vulva, vagina, penis, and oral pharynx. HPV types 16 and 18 are among the most common cancer causing infections. HBV vaccination is usually part of childhood vaccination. In 2010, 179 countries reported including HBV vaccination in their childhood vaccination program and nearly 70% of children wordwide receive three doses of the HBV vaccine. This should significantly reduce the incidence of liver cancer in coming decades. For HPV vaccine, it is best given to boys and girls at ages 11 to 12, but it can be given to those 9 to 26 years old. The vaccines are most effective when given to pre-teens, before they become sexually active. 

Checking for cancer or for conditions that might lead to cancer in people who have no symptoms is called screening. Screening tests are not meant to diagnose cancer. Sometimes screening test can find signs or symptoms of cancer before the person knows of the problem. In these cases, the person will be referred for further diagnostic test. Detecting cancer early is the key to surviving cancer. Chances of complete cure can be 95% or higher, for some cancers, if the cancer is found early. The evidence is strong that regular screening for breast, colorectal and cervical cancer can find cancer early. So if a person does have cancer, the longer he or she waits to get screened, the more likely that they will be diagnosed at later stage of cancer. And the later that cancer is diagnosed, the lower the chances of survival.
Cancers we can screen for include breast cancer, cervival cancer, and colorectal cancer. The most common method to screen for breast cancer is mammography. Women age 40 to 49 years old should talk with their healthcare provider about their risk of breast cancer and how often to have a mammogram. In addition, women should get regular clinical breast exams by their physicians as part of their annual exams. Cervival cancer is the fourth most common cancer in women worldwide. There are two tyes of approved cervival cancer screening test: PAP test and HPV test. New cervical cancer screening guidelines recommend annual PAP testing every three years for women age 21 to 65. Colorectal cancer is the third most common cancer wordwide. A stool blooed test (a test that identifies the presence of blood in a small sample of stool) should be done annually alone or with sigmoidoscopy or colonoscopy (uses a tube with a light to examine the lower one-third of the colon or the entire colon). If polyps are detected, the can be removed during the test and sent to a laboratory to test for cancer.

Here are some reasons commonly hear to avoid cancer screening test. Fear of finding cancer, fear of treatment, the cost of screening, not knowing what test to get or where to go for testing, embarrassment,waiting for symptoms to appear before going to get checked, thinking they are not at risk because they are older, or because they do not have family history.
Please note, cancer screening shows that most people usually do not have cancer, and this leads to peace of mind. For most of cancers, when caught earlier, the treatment is much less intensive. Also remember that being healthy and cancer free is beneficial to the whole family. Many cancers take years to grow in your body without causing pain or other symptoms, so it is important not to wait before you have symptoms. Only a small of percentage or people who develop cancer have a family history of cancer. In fact, three out of four people who are diagnosed with cancer do not have a family history. Thus, you should get screened even if no one in your family had cancer. Cancer does not just impact you. A cancer diagnosis can impact the whole family. Please remember that cancer screening can save your life.

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Summary from the lectures: “Introduction to the Science of Cancer” – The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center-James
* Additional data source:

Images:
Salam sehat,
Kathryn - Tokyo


3 comments:

  1. Kath, terima kasih atas artikel sambungannya, jadi benar adanya bahwa beberapa jenis Kanker dapat menular disebabkan Virus, Bakteri dan Parasit

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  2. ko Jim, thanks sudah mampir!
    Iya virusnya tepatnya yang menular. Dan akhirnya bikin cancer risk nya meningkat.

    Seneng banget ko Jim nyempetin mampir sini :)

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    Replies
    1. iya Kath, saya seneng sekali baca-baca artikel kesehatan seperti ini karena menambah banyak pengetahuan dan gunanya, sering lewat kemari ngecheck kalau ada artikel baru, ok salam buat semua yah terutama kedua jagoannya GBU all

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