Anal cancer in the United States linked to AIDS and inequalities

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National study finds major gaps in screening for anal cancer in the south-east and midwest

Anal cancer diagnoses in men in the United States aged 50 and over rose over a decade and states with a higher frequency of AIDS diagnoses tended to have a higher frequency of anal cancer diagnoses too, a national study of anal cancer mortality published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology reports.

The study authors suggest that structural inequalities leading to late HIV diagnosis, poor access to care and a diagnosis of AIDS contribute to a higher risk of anal cancer in some parts of the United States for men.

Read the full story at Aidsmap.

 

Source : Aidsmap

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