Incidence
Although reported incidence rates have increased in
the past 20 years, mesothelioma is still a relatively rare cancer.
The incidence is approximately one per 1,000,000. For comparison,
populations with high levels of smoking can have a lung cancer
incidence of over 1,000 per 1,000,000. Incidence of malignant
mesothelioma currently ranges from about 7 to 40 per 1,000,000 in
industrialized Western nations, depending on the amount of asbestos
exposure of the populations during the past several decades. It has
been estimated that incidence may have peaked at 15 per 1,000,000
in the United States in 2004. Incidence is expected to continue
increasing in other parts of the world. Mesothelioma occurs more
often in men than in women and risk increases with age, but this
disease can appear in either men or women at any age. Approximately
one fifth to one third of all mesotheliomas are peritoneal.
Between 1940 and 1979, approximately 27.5 million
people were occupationally exposed to asbestos in the United States
. Between 1973 and 1984, there has been a threefold increase in the
diagnosis of pleural mesothelioma in Caucasian males. From 1980 to
the late 1990s, the death rate from mesothelioma in the USA
increased from 2,000 per year to 3,000, with men four times more
likely to acquire it than women. These rates may not be accurate,
since it is possible that many cases of mesothelioma are
misdiagnosed as adenocarcinoma of the lung, which is difficult to
differentiate from mesothelioma.
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