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Læknablaðið - 01.12.1978, Qupperneq 65

Læknablaðið - 01.12.1978, Qupperneq 65
LÆKNABLAÐIÐ 199 one hundred years developed slowly and was mostly concerned with the exotic cancers of the non-european world, often of custom and usage, such as the Kang and Kangri cancers, the dhoti and other cancers of India, but amongst these oddities over 100 years ago the frequency of plantar melanomas in darkly pigmented peoples had been observed, though almost nothing was known of their internal cancers.18 Then an era ensued dominated by natio- nal and international cancer mortality statistics which markedly illuminated so many aspects of cancer but which tended to obscure others as it tended to conceal the importance of specific cancer types. It also showed remarkably similar cancer site and type patterns in all the countries producing such figures, not surprising, in that all were technically advanced in- dustrial countries. In Japan the pattern, however, was different suggesting perhaps the influence of race.8 All through this period, attention had been paid to the mysteries of that disease first described by Thomas Hodgkin in 1839 to which his name was attached. Some de- gree of specificity had been attained in diagnosis by 18781- but its mysteries per- plex us still, its diagnosis is difficult and is made by recognising a cell, not specific to the disease, the Reed-Sternberg cell, and which is not the cell described by either Reed or Sternberg38 against a background of lymphocytic cells and histiocytes, which are modified lymphocytes. No other cancer is diagnosed histologically in this queer way and the true nature of this disease is as obscure as ever. Long considered an in- fective condition, and classified internatio- nally as such, all attempts by laboratory methods, still continuing today, have utter- ly failed to oncover an infective causative agent. Mainly today it is considered a cancer but the causative factors elude us and still, though a relatively uncommon disease, it has attracted attention quite dis- proportionately to its incidence.2-111 20 How then are we to grapple with this problem other than perhaps by laboratory techni- ques that have so far provided no answers save negative ones? In 1944 Sir Ernest Kennaway23 drew attention to the established infrequency of primary liver cancer in the American negro in contrast to the reported high frequency of this disease in West Africa, the ancestral home of the US negro. If this was a true discrepancy, as Charles Berman1 in S. Africa was trying to show, and indeed, was demonstrating, that the differences were entirely in the different frequency of primary hepatocellular cancer, then this indicated the overwhelming importance of environmental factors in this carcinoma. If in this, why not in other cancers. This occurred when the link between cigarette smoking and lung cancer, rising so rapidly in incidence11 was reported, again a rise linked to certain specific histologic types of lung cancer. These reports emphasised three things: (1) the importance of accu- rate specific diagnosis of particular cancers under study; (2) the importance of en- vironmental factors in certain specific internal cancers, and; (3) that national cancer figures were of little use in seeking the environmental causes of cancers. It was also becoming likely that if environmental factors were responsible for certain cancers of remarkably high inci- dence in certain societies, then it was possible that they were responsible for much human cancer and that the rise in cancer incidence with age in developed societies might not be connected with aging per se but be due to more prolonged exposure to environmental carcinogens. The late Dr. George Oettle put this in words33 when he pointed out that based on experience in Africa 84% of human cancer, at least, was environmentally determined and hence theoretically preventable. In Africa too, age and cancer were found to dissociate. Doll12 considers that the best comparisons are made by comparing cancer incidence rates in persons aged 35—65, thus avoiding the imbalances produced in populations with a large population of children or of the aged. Looking at the widest discrepancies in Doll’s tables,10 as optimist and pessimist view a half filled glass, those concerned with carcinogenesis and pollution look to the high figures, but
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