Global cancer rates in men are predicted to climb by up to 84 per cent over the next three decades, says the research team behind a troubling new study.
The latest findings from Charles Sturt University Rural Health Research Institute academics indicate a worrying trend for men around the world, with Australia's male population sadly boasting the highest incidence of cancer diagnosis of any country in the study.
The study, Burden of 30 cancers among men: Global statistics in 2022 and projections for 2050 using population-based estimates, analysed cancer statistics for men in 185 countries and territories worldwide, exploring the trends related to 30 different types of cancer in men, including the mortality-to-incidence ratios of each.