NewsArena
Newsarena.ng is an online news media established to disseminate up-to-date and unbiased reportage of issues of public concern, with high level of professionalism, based on truth.

Four Out Of Every 10 Cancer Cases Are Preventable – WHO

Culled By Mosope Kehinde

A global analysis released this week by the World Health Organisation (WHO) says that up to four in every ten new cancer cases could be prevented through changes in behaviour, stronger policies, and public health action.

The findings, published to coincide with World Cancer Day on February 4, 2026, draw on a Nature Medicine study that analysed data from 185 countries and 36 cancer types.

According to the report, about 37% of the 18.7 million new cancer cases in 2022 were linked to modifiable risk factors such as tobacco use, infections, and lifestyle exposures.

“The science is clear,” said Dr Maria Neira, WHO Director of Environment, Climate Change and Health. “A large portion of cancers — particularly those related to tobacco, infections and unhealthy environments — are not inevitable. They are preventable.”

Tobacco remains the single largest preventable cause of cancer, accounting for roughly 15% of new cases globally, the report shows. Other major contributors include infectious agents such as human papillomavirus (HPV) and Helicobacter pylori, which together make up about 10% of cases

Also Read:  FG Vetting Candidates For Ambassadorial Positions — Report

“Smoking and infection-associated cancers continue to take an enormous toll,” said Dr Elisabete Weiderpass, Director of the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), part of WHO. “Effective prevention is not only possible — it must be prioritised.”

Vaccines, Behaviour Change and Policy Action

One of the starkest examples of preventable disease highlighted in the research is cervical cancer, which is overwhelmingly caused by HPV — a virus for which safe vaccines exist. Similarly, cancers linked to H. pylori infection, which can be treated or prevented through improved sanitation and medical screening, were also prominent.

Also Read:  Oyo Govt. Orders Reopening of 23 Schools

“We are at a moment where public health interventions — such as HPV vaccination, tobacco control measures, and healthier environmental policies — could save millions of lives,” Dr Weiderpass said.

The WHO analysis also found significant differences in preventable cancer burdens between regions and sexes:
In men, about 45% of cancers were attributable to modifiable factors.

Also Read:  JUST IN: Building Collapse Claims Lives In Lagos

In women, the figure was lower, at around 30%.

Regional estimates varied widely, with areas such as East Asia, Latin America, North Africa and West Asia showing different patterns of preventable risk exposure.

 

 

Channels TV



...To get more news updates, Join our WhatsApp Group (Click Here) and Telegram Group(Click Here)
Leave A Reply

Your email address will not be published.