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After considering the aging population in developed countries, it
has become clear to physicians and public policy administrators
that prevention of cancer must play a more important role in
national anti-cancer policy than it has in the past. The recent
introduction of an HPV vaccine, coupled with discoveries concerning
the relationship of H. pylori and cancer has brought the role of
infectious agents in cancer into sharp focus in the medical
community. While interest in the subject has grown, no single
source existed to bring clinicians up-to-date on developments in
disease mechanisms, population-based risk assessment and policy
considerations in the field of cancer prevention. In this current
and comprehensive text the authors review the basic science and
clinical implications of individual infectious agents, while going
beyond a mere update of the literature to offer insights on the
current emerging prevention possibilities. This prevention
perspective is what makes this particular text so valuable to
researchers, epidemiologists, health care policy makers and
oncologists. The discussion is organized to highlight the vital
role of primary cancer prevention, and suggest directions for
future research, practice and policy.
Since HPV continues to be at the center of interest in the arena of
infectious agents and cancer, the authors frame the majority of
their discussion on this now-famous virus. The sheer volume of
literature related to this virus and its many related cancers, and
the burgeoning research on the development and implementation of a
prophylactic vaccine necessitates a much fuller review of this
infectious agent. Therefore, the book is roughly divided into two
equal parts: one part devoted to HPV and another part devoted to
five other prominent infectious agents in cancer.
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