A recent bulletin published by the
World Health Organization estimates that 92,252 people around the world died of
mesothelioma in the 15-year period from 1994 through 2008.
Two-thirds of those
deaths have occurred since the year 2000 and the incidence of mesothelioma is
on the rise, the report said. Mesothelioma is an aggressive and largely
preventable form of cancer associated with breathing asbestos fibers.
A preponderance of the mesothelioma
deaths analyzed by the WHO involved pleural mesothelioma, a malignant cancer of
the lining of the lung and chest cavity. Pleural mesothelioma is seen far more
often than peritoneal mesothelioma, a cancer of the lining of the abdomen
caused by ingesting asbestos dust. Pericardial mesothelioma, a cancer of the
lining of the heart, is rarer still.
Mesothelioma is slow growing and
symptoms typically appear 30 years or longer after initial exposure to
asbestos. Many mesothelioma sufferers are retired workers or veterans. The
median survival after diagnosis is typically 9 to 12 months and the median age
at death 70.
Of the 92,252 recorded mesothelioma
deaths, the vast majority occurred in high income industrialized countries
including the United States ,
the United Kingdom and
countries in Western Europe , the report said.
The countries with the highest cumulative mesothelioma deaths tended to be the
countries that were the largest users of asbestos. They also are more diligent in recording mesothelioma
deaths.
Underreporting is a common problem with
rare diseases such as mesothelioma that are difficult to diagnose. The actual
number of mesothelioma deaths is likely much higher, the researchers
acknowledged. Some countries such as China ,
India , Thailand and the Russian Federation that are large
users of asbestos did not provide mesothelioma death data to the World Health
Organization.
The use of asbestos has been strictly
limited in the United States
since the late 1970s and it has been banned in many European nations. Still,
many workers such as construction workers, electricians, plumbers and
demolition workers face an occupational hazard of asbestos exposure in the
workplace. The WHO said the burden of mesothelioma may be gradually shifting to
developing countries that used asbestos more recently and those countries
should prepare for an increase in the number of mesothelioma deaths in coming
decades.
Source: About Mesothelioma. By Wade Rawlins. 5 October 2011
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