P. Pisani et al., CANCER AND INFECTION - ESTIMATES OF THE ATTRIBUTABLE FRACTION IN 1990, Cancer epidemiology, biomarkers & prevention, 6(6), 1997, pp. 387-400
Various estimates of the proportion of all cancers attributable to inf
ections have been proposed but none have been numerically justified. W
e have reviewed the evidence for ''causality'' with respect to infecti
ous agents linked with cancer and estimated the fraction of all cancer
cases concerned that are attributable to it, The etiological fraction
was applied to the estimated annual incidence of cancer at each speci
fic site in 1990, and the number of attributable cases was obtained. W
e estimate that 15.6% (1,450,000 cases) of the worldwide incidence of
cancer in 1990 can be attributed to infection with either the hepatiti
s B and C viruses, the human papillomaviruses, EBV, human T-cell lymph
otrophic virus I, HIV, the bacterium Helicobacter pylori, schistosomes
, or liver flukes, There would be 21% fewer cases of cancer in develop
ing countries (1,000,000 fewer cases per year) and 9% fewer cases in d
eveloped countries (375,000 fewer cases per year) if these infectious
diseases were prevented, The attributable fraction at the specific sit
es varies from 89% of cervix cancers attributable to the papillomaviru
ses to 1% of all leukemias attributable to human T-cell lymphotrophic
virus I.