Sept. 28, 2023
Prevention could have prevented nearly seven in 10 premature cancer deaths among women worldwide in 2020, new research has found.
The Lancet Commission on Women, Power, and Cancer, as well as the World Health Organization’s International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), released their findings(opens in a new tab) this week on the issue.
The researchers say 5.3 million adults, between 30 and 69 years old, died prematurely from cancer in 2020 around the world. Of those, 2.3 million were women.
The findings suggest that prevention could have stopped roughly two-thirds of those deaths.
“Globally, there are marked inequalities between countries in reaching the target of reducing premature mortality from non-communicable diseases, including cancer, set out by the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals,” Dr. Isabelle Soerjomataram, deputy head of the Cancer Surveillance Branch at IARC and co-chair of the Lancet Commission on Women, Power, and Cancer, said in a news release.