British Journal of Cancer
Volume 79, Issue 7-8, 1999, Pages 1277-1282

Cancer mortality in East and Southeast Asian migrants to New South Wales, Australia, 1975-1995 (Article) (Open Access)

McCredie M.* , Williams S. , Coates M.
  • a Cancer Epidemiology Research Unit, New South Wales Cancer Council, PO Box 572, Kings Cross, NSW 2011, Australia, Dept. of Prev. and Social Medicine, University of Otago, PO Box 913, Dunedin, New Zealand
  • b Dept. of Prev. and Social Medicine, University of Otago, PO Box 913, Dunedin, New Zealand
  • c Cancer Epidemiology Research Unit, New South Wales Cancer Council, PO Box 572, Kings Cross, NSW 2011, Australia

Abstract

Routinely collected data for New South Wales were used to analyse cancer mortality in migrants born in East or Southeast Asia according to duration of residence in Australia. A case-control approach compared deaths from cancer at particular sites with deaths from all other cancers, adjusting for age, sex and calendar period. Compared with the Australian-born, these Asian migrants had a 30-fold higher risk of dying from nasopharyngeal cancer in the first 2 decades of residence, falling to ninefold after 30 years, and for deaths from liver cancer, a 12-fold risk in the first 2 decades, falling to threefold after 30 years. The initial lower risk from colorectal, breast or prostate cancers later converged towards the Australian-born level, the change being apparent in the third decade after migration. The relative risk of dying from lung cancer among these Asian migrants was above unity for each category of duration of stay for women, but at or below unity for men, with no trend in risk over time. An environmental or lifestyle influence for nasopharyngeal and liver cancers is suggested as well as for cancers of colon/rectum, breast and prostate.

Author Keywords

Australia cancer Migrants Asia Duration of residence Mortality

Index Keywords

immigrant breast cancer Asian Australia prostate cancer risk Neoplasms human middle aged colorectal cancer priority journal Time Factors Far East Aged Humans Adolescent Infant, Newborn male Southeast Asia female Aged, 80 and over Infant Child, Preschool New South Wales nasopharynx cancer Article cancer mortality liver cancer adult Sex Factors Sex Distribution age distribution Emigration and Immigration Asia, Southeastern Child

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0032983937&doi=10.1038%2fsj.bjc.6690205&partnerID=40&md5=a8cce6ba6a4f99f9e2c630b3bc909e88

DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6690205
ISSN: 00070920
Cited by: 54
Original Language: English