
SC/51/2 & GC/57/2 IARC Interim Annual Report 2014
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Section of Cancer Surveillance (CSU)
The Section of Cancer Surveillance (CSU) focuses on global cancer surveillance and the
systematic and ongoing pursuit of global cancer data and statistics for cancer control action.
CSU collects, analyses, interprets, and disseminates indicators that capture the changing scale
and profile of the disease via three essential and complementary areas of activity:
• Cancer registry support and development. The long-standing collaborative
relationship of CSU with population-based cancer registries (PBCRs) worldwide, members
of the International Association of Cancer Registries (IACR), remains vital in improving
the availability, validity, and timeliness of cancer data at the national, regional, and
global levels. Through the Global Initiative for Cancer Registry Development (GICR), CSU
aims to radically increase the quality and availability of cancer incidence data in low- and
middle-income countries (LMICs). Advocating for the central role of PBCRs in national
cancer control planning, reference centres (IARC Regional Hubs) are operating in six
regions to provide targeted support to countries wishing to plan and develop their PBCR
programmes.
• Global cancer indicators: development and dissemination. The compilation,
estimation, and reporting of cancer statistics are performed through CSU’s flagship
projects and databases
Cancer Incidence in Five Continents
and GLOBOCAN,
international compendiums of high-quality registry data and of national estimates of
incidence, mortality, and prevalence, respectively. A greater focus is now being placed
on the development of interactive and user-friendly web-based tools to better inform
cancer control and cancer research.
• Descriptive epidemiology of cancer: core activities and innovation. An
increasingly diverse and comprehensive set of collaborative studies describe and
interpret the changing magnitude and transitional nature of the cancer profile, via the
observation of variations by geography and time. A novel additional research area aims
to develop indicators that underscore cancer as a major cause of premature death, as a
barrier to old age, and as a chronic condition linked to social and economic development.
Cancer registry support and development
The cancer incidence burden is projected to increase from 14.1 million in 2012 to 21.6 million by
2030, with increases of 60–70% forecast in Latin America, Asia, and Africa. The development
and implementation of national cancer control plans is imperative in every country, yet planning
is impossible without first identifying the scale and the profile of cancer in the community. It is
of acute concern that currently only 68 countries (mainly high-income countries) are equipped
with high-quality PBCR data for such purposes, while in 62 countries (mainly LMICs), no reliable
data are available.
Bolstered by the high-level efforts to combat noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) and by
countries agreeing to collect cancer incidence data as a marker of progress, the IARC-led GICR
partnership (http://gicr.iarc.fr) aims to change the surveillance landscape, aiding and
accelerating the availability of PBCRs for national cancer control. The key instrument through
which these ambitions are realized is the formation of six IARC Regional Hubs for Cancer
Registration, which provide localized programmes of training, support, and advocacy to targeted
countries within defined regions.
The infrastructure and governance of GICR have evolved in 2014 to embrace the dedicated
surveillance activities of the international organizations represented (the GICR Partners Group)
to provide strategic advice on integrating efforts in fully operationalizing the Hubs. Membership
of the GICR Partners Group includes the American Cancer Society (ACS), IACR, the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Programme of Action for Cancer Therapy (PACT), the Public