Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Brain, CNS cancer: Toms River, New Jersey: 90+ SAN trimer Styrene Acrylonitrile [9] [10] [11] 1973–1986 Leukemia: Woburn, Massachusetts: 21 Chloroform Tetrachloroethylene Trichloroethylene 1,2-Dichloroethene Arsenic [12] [13] 1982–1984 Testicular cancer: Fulton County, New York: 3 Dimethylformamide (DMF) 2-Ethoxyethanol 2-Ethoxyethyl ...
The cancer exodus hypothesis offers important insights into how metastasis occurs and highlights the significance of CTC clusters in cancer progression. Detecting and analyzing CTC clusters through liquid biopsies could offer valuable information about the aggressiveness and metastatic potential of cancers.
A cancer cluster is a disease cluster in which a high number of cancer cases occurs in a group of people in a particular geographic area over a limited period of time. [ 1 ] Historical examples of work-related cancer clusters are well documented in the medical literature.
Global cancer incidence in males and females (2022) [1] Country Male Female Including NMSC Excluding NMSC Including NMSC Excluding NMSC Number Rate Number Rate Number Rate Number Rate Australia: 116,363 514.3 80,960 344.4 95,969 415.2 70,569 303.8 New Zealand: 20,562 473.4 14,766 325.4 17,595 386.3 12,785 277.3 United States: 1,283,898 401.7 ...
In the United States during 2013–2017, the age-adjusted mortality rate for all types of cancer was 189.5/100,000 for males, and 135.7/100,000 for females. [1] Below is an incomplete list of age-adjusted mortality rates for different types of cancer in the United States from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results program.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
The average annual incidence in the United States, 1975–1995, was 233 per million infants. [30] Several estimates of incidence exist. According to SEER, [30] in the United States in 1999: Neuroblastoma comprised 28% of infant cancer cases and was the most common malignancy among these young children, at 65 cases per million infants.
Toms River: A Story of Science and Salvation is a 2013 nonfiction book by the American author Dan Fagin. [1] It is about the dumping of industrial pollution by chemical companies including Ciba-Geigy, in Toms River, New Jersey, beginning in 1952 through the 1980s, [2] and the epidemiological investigations of a cancer cluster that subsequently emerged there.