AI Article Synopsis

  • Qidong City, China, faced a high incidence of liver cancer linked to hepatitis B virus (HBV) and aflatoxin exposure, prompting interventions starting in 1980 to reduce aflatoxin in diets and initiate neonatal HBV vaccinations.
  • The interventions led to a significant decline in aflatoxin exposure due to economic reforms and educational shifts in food consumption, transitioning from moldy corn to fresh rice.
  • Consequently, liver cancer incidence drastically decreased among young adults, especially in those aged 20-24, with a 14-fold reduction observed from 1980-1983 to 2005-2008, indicating the combined impact of reduced aflatoxin exposure and partial neonatal HBV vaccination.

Article Abstract

Qidong City, China, has had high liver cancer incidence from endemic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection and dietary exposure to aflatoxin. Based on etiologic studies, we began interventions in 1980 to reduce dietary aflatoxin and initiate neonatal HBV vaccination. We studied trends in liver cancer incidence rates in the 1.1 million inhabitants of Qidong and examined trends in aflatoxin exposure, staple food consumption, HBV infection markers and annual income. Aflatoxin exposure declined greatly in association with economic reform, increased earnings and educational programs to shift staple food consumption in the total population from moldy corn to fresh rice. A controlled neonatal HBV vaccination trial began in 1983 and ended in November, 1990, when vaccination was expanded to all newborns. Liver cancer incidence fell dramatically in young adults. Compared with 1980-83, the age-specific liver cancer incidence rates in 2005-08 significantly decreased 14-fold at ages 20-24, 9-fold at ages 25-29, 4-fold at ages 30-34, 1.5-fold at ages 35-39, 1.2-fold at ages 40-44 and 1.4-fold at ages 45-49, but increased at older ages. The 14-fold reduction at ages 20-24 might reflect the combined effects of reduced aflatoxin exposure and partial neonatal HBV vaccination. Decrease incidence in age groups >25 years could mainly be attributable to rapid aflatoxin reduction. Compared with 1980-83, liver cancer incidence in 1990-93 significantly decreased 3.4-fold at ages 20-24, and 1.9-fold at ages 25-29 when the first vaccinees were <11 years old.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3731800PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/carcin/bgt007DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

liver cancer
24
cancer incidence
24
neonatal hbv
12
hbv vaccination
12
aflatoxin exposure
12
ages 20-24
12
ages
10
young adults
8
hbv infection
8
incidence rates
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!