H S Rao, London, Apr 13, 2014, (PTI):
India is
facing a cancer crisis, with smoking, belated diagnosis and unequal
access to treatment causing large-scale problems, experts said.
Every
year in India, around one million new cancer cases are diagnosed and
around 600,000 to 700,000 people die from cancer in India, with this
death toll projected to rise to around 1.2 million deaths per year by
2035, a new report on cancer care in India published in The Lancet
Oncology reported.
The new report has been
compiled by Professor Richard Sullivan and Professor Arnie Purushotham
from King's Health Partners Cancer Centre at King's College London with
the help of senior Indian colleagues including Professor CS Pramesh and
Professor Rajan Badwe at the Tata Memorial Cancer Centre, Mumbai.
"Access to affordable cancer treatment and care in India lags behind other parts of the world.
Making such treatment and care accessible will require addressing its causes, while also developing affordable treatments," Professor Sunil Khilnani, Director, King's India Institute, King's College London, said.
Making such treatment and care accessible will require addressing its causes, while also developing affordable treatments," Professor Sunil Khilnani, Director, King's India Institute, King's College London, said.
Although
India has a relatively lower incidence of cancer (around a quarter of
that in the USA or Western Europe), the rate of deaths from cancer,
adjusted for age, is similar to that seen in high-income countries, the
report said.
Less than a third of patients with cancer in India currently survive for more than five years after diagnosis.
Around
95 per cent of the medical colleges in India do not have comprehensive
cancer care services, comprising Surgical, Medical and Radiation
Oncology departments, in the same campus.
Currently
there are around 2,000 medical and radiation oncologists in India – one
per 5000 newly diagnosed cancer patients – and in almost all remote or
rural areas even the most basic cancer treatment facilities are
non-existent, it said.
As a result, urban cancer
centres are overcrowded and under-resourced, leading to long waiting
times, delayed diagnoses, and treatment that comes too late for many
patients.
"The need for political commitment and
action is at the heart of the solution to India's growing cancer
burden," said Mohandas Mallath, a professor at the Tata Medical Centre
in Kolkata.
"The extent to which death and illness from
cancer will actually increase in the next 20 years will depend a lot on
the investments made in future decades in tobacco control, healthcare
delivery, cancer research, (and) clinical trials," Mallath said.
Also
vital, he said, will be boosting public awareness about smoking and of
the benefits a healthy diet and lifestyle, as well as investment in
vaccinations against cancer-causing viruses.
Globally, there is a well-established
correlation between research activity and positive patient outcomes, and
in the report authors point out that because of its existing research
infrastructure and successes in developing low-cost cancer treatment and
prevention solutions, India is uniquely poised to be able to make a far
greater contribution to global cancer control than can research done by
high-income countries.
Improving cancer outcomes in
India will also need far more concerted efforts towards preventing
people from getting cancer in the first place.
The potential economic benefits of implementing better tobacco control
are stark – two fifths (40 per cent) of all cancers in India are
attributable to tobacco use, and the economic costs of illness and
premature death due to tobacco consumption exceed combined government
and state expenditure on medical and public health, water supply, and
sanitation.
Finally, public awareness of and
attitudes towards cancer in India are, in some cases, preventing
patients from receiving effective treatment.
Cancer
carries a stigma and many Indians believe that cancer is generally
incurable and that it should be kept secret from family and neighbours.
These
attitudes can negatively affect uptake of and adherence to treatment,
even after a cancer diagnosis, and the only solution to this issue is a
concerted effort to educate and engage the public on the facts about
cancer, it said.
"Cancer research needs to be
central to plans for national cancer control, and cancer needs to be one
of the focuses of national research agendas and priorities," said
Professor Richard Sullivan, King's College London, series coordinator
and lead author of the series paper on cancer research in India.
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