British Journal of Cancer
Volume 72, Issue 5, 1995, Pages 1312-1319

Cancer mortality in Indian and British ethnic immigrants from the Indian subcontinent to England and Wales (Article) (Open Access)

Swerdlow A.J.* , Marmot M.G. , Grulich A.E. , Head J.
  • a Epidemiological Monitoring Unit, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Keppel Street, London, WCJE 7HT, United Kingdom
  • b Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, UniversitY College and Middlesex School of Medicine, 1- 19 Torrington Place, London, WCIE 6BT, United Kingdom
  • c Epidemiological Monitoring Unit, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Keppel Street, London, WCJE 7HT, United Kingdom, Department of Public Health, University of Sydney, Edward Ford Building, A27 Fisher Road, NSW, 2006, Australia
  • d Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, UniversitY College and Middlesex School of Medicine, 1- 19 Torrington Place, London, WCIE 6BT, United Kingdom

Abstract

Risk of cancer mortality from 1973 to 1985 in persons born in the Indian subcontinent who migrated to England and Wales was analysed by ethnicity, and compared with cancer mortality in the England and Wales native population, using data from England and Wales death certificates. There were substantial highly significant raised risks in Indian ethnic migrants for cancers of the mouth and pharynx, gall bladder, and liver in each sex, larynx and thyroid in males, and oesophagus in females. There were also substantial raised risks in these migrants of each sex for non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma and myeloma. For the mouth and pharynx, and liver in each sex, and gall bladder in females, there were also raised risks of lesser magnitude in British ethnic migrants. For colon and rectal cancer and cutaneous melanoma in each sex, ovarian cancer in women and bladder cancer in men, there were appreciable significantly reduced risks in the Indian ethnic migrants not shared by those of British ethnicity. Appreciable raised risks in British ethnic migrants not shared by those of Indian ethnicity occurred for nasopharyngeal cancer in males, soft tissue malignancy in both sexes and non-melanoma skin cancer in males. In migrants of both ethnicities there were appreciable significantly raised risks in each sex for leukaemia and decreased risks in each sex for gastric cancer, for lung cancer except in females of British ethnicity and in males for testicular cancer. The results suggest the need for public health measures to combat the high risks of oral and pharyngeal cancers and liver cancer in the Indian ethnic immigrant population of England and Wales, by prevention of betel quid chewing and hepatitis transmission respectively. The data also imply that early exposures or early acquired behaviours in India, or exposures during migration, may increase the risk of leukaemia and reduce the risks of gastric and testicular cancers in the migrants irrespective of their ethnicity. Aetiological studies would be worthwhile to investigate the reasons for the sizeable decreased risk of colon and rectal cancer and increased risk of gall bladder cancer in each sex and the increased risk of thyroid and laryngeal cancer in males and oesophageal cancer in females of Indian ethnicity but not of British ethnicity who have migrated from the Indian subcontinent. © 1995 Stockton Press. All rights reserved.

Author Keywords

immigrants Cancer mortality

Index Keywords

immigrant Death Certificates Life Style death certificate India lung cancer risk Indian Neoplasms human Ethnic Groups ethnic group priority journal Aged melanoma pharynx cancer rectum cancer Adolescent Wales male England myeloma testis cancer female Infant Child, Preschool Risk Factors thyroid cancer gallbladder cancer larynx cancer nonhodgkin lymphoma bladder cancer nasopharynx cancer ovary cancer Article esophagus cancer liver cancer hepatitis leukemia cancer mortality Support, Non-U.S. Gov't adult mouth cancer United Kingdom data analysis Carcinogens, Environmental Emigration and Immigration colon cancer skin cancer stomach cancer Middle Age public health Child

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0028886701&doi=10.1038%2fbjc.1995.507&partnerID=40&md5=0bd81a306dc6635ac8510b844f9ca64c

DOI: 10.1038/bjc.1995.507
ISSN: 00070920
Cited by: 75
Original Language: English