Every year on 4 February, the Union for International Cancer Control (UICC) and other organisations (including World Cancer Research Fund), charities, policymakers, and individuals come together to mark World Cancer Day. As UICC perfectly puts it:
World Cancer Day aims to prevent millions of deaths each year by raising awareness and education about cancer, and pressing governments and individuals across the world to take action against the disease.
This year, as part of a multi-year campaign from 2022–24, the theme is Closing the care gap: Everyone deserves access to cancer care.
The campaign aims to reduce the global impact cancer has upon health in 2 ways:
- Increase awareness of how individuals can live in ways that reduce their risk of cancer.
- Encourage and enable policymakers to implement the policies needed to reduce cancer incidence and mortality by creating equal access to cancer care, and healthful societies and environments.
Cancer is not an equal disease
UICC made the decision to run a 3-year campaign to highlight the importance of understanding the inequalities and disparities that exist within cancer, as well as working in collaborative ways to reduce them. Each year of the campaign has a related, but different, theme.
Year 1
The focus of World Cancer Day in 2022 was to report and understand the inequalities that exist within cancer care around the world. These include the inequalities and barriers that people face when trying to access healthcare services (including cancer screening and treatment), differences in healthy and unhealthy behaviours between groups and how they impact cancer risk, the cost to governments, communities and individuals of these inequalities, and how we can all work to change them.
Year 2
This year, the focus of World Cancer Day is collaboration – how can governments, organisations and communities work together to reduce health inequalities in cancer?
Year 3
In 2024 the theme will be to take everything that we have learnt over the first two years of the campaign to work towards change and reducing health inequalities in cancer. This will include working with governments to prioritise cancer and the elimination of inequalities in cancer outcomes and access to services.
> ‘Don’t blame the poor, blame poverty’: understanding health inequalities in cancer
Here are some of the ways World Cancer Research Fund is striving to reduce the global health burden of cancer through collaboration:
Global Cancer Update Programme
At the end of 2022, World Cancer Research Fund launched our flagship research programme called the Global Cancer Update Programme. The programme analyses the global research to further our understanding of how diet, nutrition, physical activity and body weight impact cancer incidence and survival. This work continues that undertaken within the Continuous Update Project, while also progressing our understanding of the causes of preventable cancers into new areas of investigation.
The Global Cancer Update Programme has 4 key themes: incidence, survival, obesity and mechanisms.
Cancer incidence
Understanding the role that diet, nutrition, physical activity and body weight have upon cancer incidence will continue to be a core element of the work. But, rather than reviewing all exposures for every cancer, we’ll be undertaking more focused and systematic scans of the evidence and identifying areas for which key pieces of evidence are missing. One new area of investigation will be to investigate cancers by their subtypes rather than as a single disease.
Cancer survival
As diagnosis and treatment for cancer continues to improve, the number of individuals living with cancer increases. The Global Cancer Update Programme explores how diet, nutrition, physical activity and body weight impact long-term health following a cancer diagnosis. Using this information, we aim to produce Cancer Prevention Recommendations that are tailored for people living with and beyond cancer.
Obesity
We identified overweight and obesity as a key risk factor for numerous cancers. This area of research will ensure that we understand the modifiable (sometimes referred to as lifestyle) risk factors for obesity. This knowledge can then feed into our incidence research seeking to understand the links between obesity and cancer incidence and mortality.
Mechanisms
A key aspect of demonstrating that a particular exposure (for example smoking) causes a cancer outcome (for example lung cancer) is evidence that a biological process (mechanism) happens within the body because of that exposure being present. The new research undertaken by us seeks to explore the evidence surrounding these mechanisms and use the results to support our research related to cancer incidence and survival.
While all of the research undertaken within the Global Cancer Update Programme seeks to better understand the impact diet, nutrition, physical activity and body weight have on cancer, we’re also looking at ways to increase our understanding of health inequalities. With this in mind, we recently joined forces with Prof Sir Michael Marmot, a world-leading expert in epidemiology, public health and health inequalities, to look at how we can have more of a focus upon cancer inequalities within the Global Cancer Update Programme, our funded research and wider work.
From science to policy
Our policy work focuses on how to create environments that enable people to follow our Cancer Prevention Recommendations and reduce their risk of developing cancer and other non-communicable diseases. Our existing policy tools such as the NOURISHING and MOVING frameworks and databases guide governments, civil society and the scientific community to take a comprehensive approach to nutrition and physical activity policy for cancer prevention.
We’re also taking exploratory steps in alcohol policy, thus expanding our policy portfolio. Across these policy areas, we aim to drive robust policy design and implementation, with a specific focus on population-based regulatory and fiscal measures. Such measures work at structural levels, by creating environments where healthy choices become default, which we know will also contribute to decreasing inequalities.
As this work develops in parallel with our new Global Cancer Update Programme, health inequalities in cancer should inform and underpin all our policy work. Through our official relations status with the World Health Organization (WHO), we give advice on developing policy, based on our evidence and research. In January, we took part in the Executive Board of the WHO, where we closely followed deliberations on the upcoming update and publication of a new WHO World Report on Social Determinants of Health Equity. With other civil society partners, we highlighted the importance of tackling commercial determinants of health inequalities, driven by actions of unhealthy commodity industries, including the alcohol and unhealthy food and beverage industries.
Funding global research
We fund a diverse portfolio of research with the aim of better understanding the role that diet, nutrition, physical activity and body weight have upon cancer risk and survival.
The research we fund continues to explore cancer within diverse global settings and populations, as well as specific groups (for example, young people with cancer and individuals living with comorbidities) and site-specific cancers.
Within all of our funded research we hope to further advance our understanding the modifiable risk factors that impact the development of cancer, and survival from it once diagnosed.
Investigating cancer and inequalities
Below you can see a snapshot of just some of the research related to inequality we’re funding.
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[accordion-item title=”How physical activity affects childhood cancers in low- and middle-income countries” state=closed]
Anthony Okely — Australia (University of Wollongong)
The aim of the SUNRISE pilot study in Fiji, Botswana and Kenya is to determine the feasibility and acceptability of the proposed methods for the SUNRISE study in each country.[/accordion-item]
[accordion-item title=”Investigating major risk factors of oesophageal cancer in north-eastern Iran” state=closed]
Paul Brennan — France (International Agency for Research on Cancer)
The study will help us understand more about this cancer type and help clarify whether poor diet and hot beverage consumption are likely to be important risk factors.[/accordion-item]
[accordion-item title=”Health behaviour interventions for Indigenous Australian cancer survivors” state=closed]
Gail Garvey — Australia (University of Queensland)
Indigenous Australians have poorer cancer outcomes compared with non-Indigenous people. In Queensland, Indigenous health workers trained as Indigenous Patient Navigators (IPN) have been used to reduce cancer disparities through their understanding of cultural and practical issues facing Indigenous patients, addressing barriers, and streamlining care. This study will find out whether having an IPN deliver a health behaviour intervention is feasible and acceptable to Indigenous cancer survivors.[/accordion-item]
[accordion-item title=”Using personalised diet and physical activity intervention to help stomach cancer patients after a gastrectomy in India” state=closed]
Aravinda Guntupalli — Scotland (University of Aberdeen)
The project aims to determine whether using information about body composition can help personalise a diet and physical activity lifestyle intervention and is acceptable to stomach cancer survivors who recently completed treatment.[/accordion-item]
[accordion-item title=”Dietary and genetic factors and risk of nasopharyngeal cancer in south-east Asia” state=closed]
James McKay — France (International Agency for Research on Cancer)
The research looks at nasopharyngeal cancer, which is rare in western countries but more common in south-east Asia.[/accordion-item]
[accordion-item title=”The protective effect of consuming polyphenols on colorectal cancer risk in Japan” state=closed]
Shoichiro Tsugane — Japan (National Cancer Centre)
The investigation explores the role of polyphenols in colorectal cancer development using molecular epidemiologic studies.[/accordion-item]
[accordion-item title=”The effect of food and drink on oesophageal cancer risk in east Africa” state=closed]
Valerie McCormack — France (International Agency for Research on Cancer)
The study is investigates dietary factors in the African oesophageal cancer corridor.[/accordion-item]
[accordion-item title=”Exercise and lifestyle intervention for adolescents with cancer” state=closed]
Alejandro Lucia & Carmen Fiuza Luces — Spain (Universidad Europea de Madrid)
Treatment for adolescent cancer can have harmful effects on the pubertal process and can affect the relationship between the heart and lungs, weight gain and muscle weakness. This study will determine if physical exercise intervention and lifestyle counselling can improve outcomes for this population.[/accordion-item]
[accordion-item title=”The acceptability and feasibility of a diet and physical activity intervention to prevent recurrence in colorectal cancer survivors” state=closed]
Judy Ho — Hong Kong (University of Hong Kong)
The study identified that there is only a limited service in Hong Kong that offers specific dietary and activity advice to prevent relapse.[/accordion-item]
[accordion-item title=”How much do preventable risk factors increase the burden of cancer?” state=closed]
Robert MacInnis — Australia (Cancer Council Victoria)
Certain behaviours or risk factors are known to increase the chance of cancer developing. Current policies and campaigns aimed at reducing the number of people who will develop cancer have not used the most recent data on how common these behaviours are, and they have not estimated the future impact on the numbers of new cancers. This study will update the data to increase the relevance of the findings to worldwide cancer prevention activities.[/accordion-item]
[accordion-item title=”Mechanisms underlying how body fatness affects postmenopausal breast cancer risk” state=closed]
Dallas English — Australia (Cancer Council Victoria)
The aim is to measure sex hormones, indicators of resistance to insulin and indicators of inflammation in stored blood samples to see whether these markers predict women’s risk of breast cancer.[/accordion-item]
[accordion-item title=”Social inequality and sex and the relationship between lifestyle and cancer” state=closed]
Pietro Ferrari — France (International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC))
This project will estimate the proportion of avoidable cancer cases and risk of cancer if healthier choices were implemented among certain socio-economic groups – both higher and lower – and in men and women. The aim is to inform a set of tailored recommendations[/accordion-item]
[accordion-item title=”Physical activity, sedentary behaviour and cancer risk in people with comorbidities” state=closed]
Michael Leitzmann — Germany (University of Regensburg)
It is thought that there are links between the presence of an existing illness, such as diabetes or cardiovascular disease, and the development of cancer. This project will find out if physical activity and sedentary behaviours can affect the risk of developing cancer in people with comorbidities.
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Read our blog series on health inequality and cancer
> Differences in cancer incidence and mortality across the globe
> ‘Don’t blame the poor, blame poverty’: understanding health inequalities in cancer
We’ve been supporting World Cancer Day for a long time! Read our blogs from 2019 and 2016.