Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Riva L. Rahl, M.D. Cooper Clinic Preventive Medicine Physician Medical Director, Cooper Wellness Program Cancer: Beating the Odds.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Riva L. Rahl, M.D. Cooper Clinic Preventive Medicine Physician Medical Director, Cooper Wellness Program Cancer: Beating the Odds."— Presentation transcript:

1 Riva L. Rahl, M.D. Cooper Clinic Preventive Medicine Physician Medical Director, Cooper Wellness Program Cancer: Beating the Odds

2 Cancer U.S. 1.4 million Cancer Deaths/year Cancer screening is available for many types Lifestyle choices can alter your risk Screening vs. Prevention Cancer

3 2009 Estimated US Cancer Cases* *Excludes basal and squamous cell skin cancers and in situ carcinomas except urinary bladder. Source: American Cancer Society, 2009. Men 766,130 Women 713,220 27%Breast 14%Lung & bronchus 10%Colon & rectum 6%Uterine corpus 4%Non-Hodgkin lymphoma 4% Melanoma of skin 4% Thyroid 3%Kidney & renal pelvis 3%Ovary 3%Pancreas 22%All Other Sites Prostate25% Lung & bronchus15% Colon & rectum10% Urinary bladder7% Melanoma of skin5% Non-Hodgkin5% lymphoma Kidney & renal pelvis5% Leukemia 3% Oral cavity3% Pancreas3% All Other Sites19% 2009 Estimated US Cancer Cases*

4 2009 Estimated US Cancer Deaths* ONS=Other nervous system. Source: American Cancer Society, 2009. Men 292,540 Women 269,800 26%Lung & bronchus 15%Breast 9%Colon & rectum 6%Pancreas 5%Ovary 4%Non-Hodgkin lymphoma 3%Leukemia 3%Uterine corpus 2%Liver & intrahepatic bile duct 2%Brain/ONS 25% All other sites Lung & bronchus30% Prostate9% Colon & rectum 9% Pancreas6% Leukemia4% Liver & intrahepatic4% bile duct Esophagus4% Urinary bladder3% Non-Hodgkin 3% lymphoma Kidney & renal pelvis3% All other sites 25% 2009 Estimated US Cancer Deaths*

5 Cancer in Women Breast cancer is the highest incidence Lung cancer is the highest mortality Cancer in Women

6 Cancer in Men Prostate cancer has the highest incidence Mortality from lung cancer is the highest –Followed by colorectal cancer –Prostate cancer is less lethal Cancer in Men

7 Cancer: Role of Genetics Some genes have been identified –BRCA1 and BRCA2 –ATM –CHEK-2 Heredity –Colon Cancer –Ovarian Cancer –Ashkenazi-Jew Cancer: Role of Genetics

8 Cancer Screening Goals –Early stage –Better chance at cure –Pre-cancerous prevention Cancer Screening

9 Different organizations have different guidelines –U.S. Preventive Services Task Force –American Cancer Society –American College of Obstet./Gynec. –American Medical Association –Medicare! Cancer Screening

10 Breast –ACS: Annual mammography 40+ –Breast self-exam –Clinical breast exam every 1-3 years 20+ Cervical –ACS: Pap test annually 18+/sexual onset –After 3 normal Paps, may do less frequently Ovarian –No organization currently recommends screening Cancer Screening

11 Prostate –ACS and AUA: annual PSA and digital rectal exam for 50+ –No other organization recommends routine prostate cancer screening (AMA/ACP/USPSTF/AAFP) Cancer Screening

12 Colorectal cancer Several options for screening –Annual FOBT plus Flex. Sig. every 3-5 years –Annual FOBT plus Barium Enema every 5-10 years –Colonoscopy every 10 years Cancer Screening

13 Lung cancer No consensus recommendation for screening Japanese study suggests: –Based on smoking history (pack-years) –High-res. lung CT scan Chest X-rays are not effective screen Cancer Screening

14 Special at-Risk Populations Family History Occupational Exposure Tobacco Use Other Diseases Special at-Risk Populations

15 Cancer: Prevention Know your risks! Start early Lead a healthy lifestyle Avoid tobacco (30% of all cancer deaths) Cancer: Prevention

16 Lung Cancer: Prevention DON’T SMOKE!!! Check your home’s radon levels Avoid asbestos Avoid marijuana If you smoke, avoid high doses vitamin A (87%) Lung Cancer: Prevention

17 Breast Cancer: Prevention Protective –Multiple pregnancies/births –Breastfeeding –Exercise Harmful –Obesity –Alcohol Hormone-replacement therapy Breast Cancer: Prevention

18 Prostate Cancer: Prevention Protective –Diet high in fruits and vegetables (lycopene, selenium, vitamin E) Harmful –Saturated fats –Being overweight Prostate Cancer: Prevention

19 Colon Cancer: Prevention Protective –Healthy weight –Exercise –Fruits/vegetables –whole grains Harmful –Alcohol –Smoking –Saturated fat Colon Cancer: Prevention

20 Protective –Oral contraceptive use –Pregnancy/breastfeeding –Tubal ligation/hysterectomy Harmful –Hormone-replacement therapy –HPV infection –Smoking Female Reproductive Cancer: Prevention

21 Brain Cancer: Prevention Cell phone use –Three case-control studies found no link Swedish National Cancer Institute American Health Foundation Brain Cancer: Prevention

22 Oral Cancer: Prevention Don’t smoke Smokeless tobacco Avoid excess alcohol Oral Cancer: Prevention

23 Skin Cancer: Prevention Sunscreen/Sunblock –SPF 15 or greater –Apply and re-apply Avoid sun exposure Avoid UV exposure Skin Cancer: Prevention

24 Liver Cancer: Prevention Avoid Alcohol Avoid Hepatitis B/C infection Liver Cancer: Prevention

25 GI Cancers: Prevention Protective –Fruits and vegetables Harmful –Nitrites –Cigarettes –Alcohol –H. Pylori infection GI Cancers: Prevention

26 Other Cancers: Prevention  Maintain a healthy weight  Avoid tobacco  Avoid excess of alcohol  Eat plenty of fruits and vegetables  Avoid environmental toxins Other Cancers: Prevention

27 What Can I Do? Know your risks Get age appropriate screening tests Be aware of your body and talk to your doctor if something is concerning Avoid carcinogens Exercise, eat healthy diet What Can I Do?

28 What Tests Do I Need? Under Age 40 –Skin Examination –Monthly Self Examination Breast Testicular –Consider baseline mammogram at 35 What Tests Do I Need?

29 Under Age 40 –Skin Examination –Monthly Self Examination Breast Testicular –Consider baseline mammogram at 35 What Tests Do I Need?

30 Age 40-49 –Continue Self-Examination –Skin Examination –Annual Mammogram –Annual Pap Smear –Consider Flex. Sigmoidoscopy or Barium Enema every 3-5 years –Baseline Lung CT if >15 pack year smoker What Tests Do I Need?

31 Age 40-49 –Continue Self-Examination –Skin Examination –Annual Mammogram –Annual Pap Smear –Consider Flex. Sigmoidoscopy or Barium Enema every 3-5 years –Baseline Lung CT if >15 pack year smoker What Tests Do I Need?

32 Age 50+ –Continue Self-Examinations –Skin Examination –Annual Mammogram/Pap Smear (stop at 70 years old?) –Annual DRE and consider PSA –Flex. Sigmoidoscopy or Barium Enema every 3-5 years or Colonoscopy every 5-10 years –Annual FOBT –Periodic Lung CT if >15 pack year smoker –Oral Examination What Tests Do I Need?

33 Age 50+ –Continue Self-Examinations –Skin Examination –Annual Mammogram/Pap Smear (stop at 70 years old?) –Annual DRE and consider PSA –Flex. Sigmoidoscopy or Barium Enema every 3-5 years or Colonoscopy every 5-10 years –Annual FOBT –Periodic Lung CT if >15 pack year smoker –Oral Examination What Tests Do I Need?

34 Questions?


Download ppt "Riva L. Rahl, M.D. Cooper Clinic Preventive Medicine Physician Medical Director, Cooper Wellness Program Cancer: Beating the Odds."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google