Air pollution, a leading cause of cancer
19 Oct MUG News
The World Health Organization on Thursday classified outdoor air
pollution as a leading cause of cancer in humans.
"The air we breathe has become polluted with a mixture of
cancer-causing substances," said Kurt Straif of the WHO's International
Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC).
"We now know that outdoor air pollution is not only a major risk to
health in general, but also a leading environmental cause of cancer
deaths."
In concrete terms, said IARC director Christopher Wild, outdoor air
pollution has been classified as a "Group 1" cause of cancer, the
riskiest category on its four-step scale.The IARC underlined that a
panel of top experts had found "sufficient evidence" that exposure to
outdoor air pollution caused lung cancer and raised the risk of bladder
cancer.Wild underlined that air pollution was not a primary cause of the
disease."We have well over a million lung cancer cases per year, the
vast majority of which are actually due to tobacco, rather than I think
around 10 percent, perhaps, which are to things like ambient air
pollution," he told reporters.Although the composition of air pollution
and levels of exposure can vary dramatically between locations, the
agency said its conclusions applied to all regions of the globe.
Air pollution was already known to increase the risk of respiratory
and heart diseases.The IARC said pollution exposure levels increased
significantly in some parts of the world in recent years, notably in
rapidly industrialising nations with large populations.The most recent
data, from 2010, showed that 223,000 lung cancer deaths worldwide were
the result of air pollution, the agency said.The data did not enable
experts to establish whether particular groups of people were more or
less vulnerable to cancer from pollution, but Straif said it was clear
that risk rose in line with exposure.In the past, the IARC had measured
the presence of individual chemicals and mixtures of chemicals in the
air including diesel engine exhaust, solvents, metals, and dust.Diesel
exhaust has already been classified as carcinogenic by the IARC.
The latest findings were based on overall air quality, and based on
an in-depth study of thousands of medical research projects conducted
around the world over decades.Our task was to evaluate the air everyone
breathes rather than focus on specific air pollutants," said the IARC's
Dana Loomis.The results from the reviewed studies point in the same
direction: the risk of developing lung cancer is significantly increased
in people exposed to air pollution," he added."Nobody has private air.
We can't do very much for the air we breathe. This really needs
collective action to solve the problem," he said.The predominant sources
of outdoor air pollution were transport, power generation, emissions
from factories and farms, and residential heating and cooking, the
agency said.Classifying outdoor air pollution as carcinogenic to humans
is an important step," said Wild.
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