Canadian Press
Fri Dec 12,
Inuits native to
Over the past 35 years, lung cancer rates doubled for Inuit men and quadrupled for Inuit women, with higher rates found amongst the population living in Canada's North.
"Lung cancer is rapidly increasing in incidence (especially in
"The most logical reason is the high smoking rate among Inuits," study co-author Kue Young, a public health professor at the
Statistics
The Inuits are at far greater risk than whites for several cancers rare among other populations -- such as colon, liver and nasopharyngeal cancer -- but have lower rates for more common cancers, such as breast and prostate cancer.
Rates for nasopharyngeal cancer -- which ferments behind the nose -- were 24 times greater for Inuit men and 37 times higher for women than American Caucasians.
But the study also stressed that "overall, with all sites combined, the risk of cancer among Inuit men and women is not significantly different from US whites."
The researchers compared rates for different types of cancers among the Inuit population between 1969 and 1973 and during a second period spanning 1999 to 2003.
According to the last national census in 2001, the Inuit population is experiencing a population boom that has boosted its numbers by 26 percent in the past decade to some 50,000 people.