Reuters AlertNet Full site
Homepage | Newsdesk | NGO Latest | Crisis briefings | Country profiles | MediaWatch | Jobs | Alerting | Login

NEWSDESK

Experts link raw fish to liver cancer in SE Asia
10 Jul 2007 00:01:11 GMT
Source: Reuters
HONG KONG, July 10 (Reuters) - Thai researchers have urged people in Southeast Asia to stop eating raw freshwater fish because they risk becoming infected with a parasitic worm that may predispose them to developing liver cancer.

At issue are parasitic worms, commonly known as fluke, which infest rivers in rural parts of Thailand, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Korea and China. The worms find their way into freshwater fish, and into humans when the fish is consumed raw.

Writing in the latest issue of the Public Library of Science journal PLoS Medicine, the researchers said most people infected with fluke showed no symptoms but some went on to develop liver cancer years later.

"Less than 1 percent who are infected with fluke will get liver cancer, but those who get infected are in the millions in Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam. There are 6 million (infected with fluke) in Thailand," said Banchob Sripa of the pathology department in Thailand's northern Khon Kaen University.

Banchob has studied the link between fluke infection and liver cancer, particularly in the bile duct, for more than 20 years.

He and his colleagues found fluke infection to be especially serious in the north and northeastern provinces of Thailand, where a raw fish dish, called Koi-Pla, is popular.

"Stop eating this, it's the easiest thing to do," Banchob said in a telephone interview.

He said fluke attack the human bile duct and the incursion triggers a "cytokine storm" -- an immune response so intense that it destroys not only the parasites, but the person's surrounding tissues as well.

"There are two mechanisms. The fluke has two suckers. It can bite the surface epithelium of the bile duct and cause ulcers. The second is the inflammation," Banchob said.

"The ones with more inflammatory cytokines may have more inflammation ... and these may develop cancer later on."

Liver cancer is usually diagnosed when it is far advanced because symptoms surface late.

"Most who are diagnosed have advanced cancers, like stage 4, so they only get palliative care. It is very difficult to detect early lesions because there are no symptoms," he said.

Most deaths occur within six months to a year of diagnosis. "There would be zero survivors after five years," he said.


AlertNet news is provided by

Email this article       Send comments

Topics

•  Technology

MORE >>

Countries

Small country map
© 2004 Europa Technologies Ltd.
Reset map

•  Cambodia profile
· View map

•  China profile
· View map

•  Korea (South) profile
· View map

•  Laos profile
· View map

•  Thailand profile
· View map

•  Vietnam profile

MORE >>

NGO latest

•  World Vision post-tsunami study shows community recovery in Thailand
WV - International

•  CWS appeal: China 2007 Earthquake Response
CWS

•  World Vision China to aid 61,040 flood-affected villagers
WV - International

•  AMERICAN RED CROSS URGES INCREASED COMMITMENT TO ACCOUNTABILITY IN POST-TSUNAMI RECOVERY
American Red Cross - USA

•  ACT Appeal: Assistance to Earthquake Affected, China-Ning'er County
ACT - Switzerland

MORE >>

Latest news

•  Experts link raw fish to liver cancer in SE Asia

•  FACTBOX-Nuclear plants in Finland and worldwide

•  Malaysia seizes 900 monkeys from wildlife poachers

•  Stolen Malaysian cars help terror funding - police

•  Wen urges greater China effort to fight pollution

MORE >>

Disclaimers |  Copyright |  Privacy |  Contact Us |  Feedback |  About Us |  RSS XML

Last updated:Tue Jul 10 00:04:35 2007