Not only are there few data on sub-Saharan migrant populations, but relatively little information is available on cancer patterns in Africa. This report presents cancer mortality patterns among the 290,000 sub-Saharan African migrants in France. Risks of mortality from different cancers in migrants born in West, Central, East, and ‘Other’ parts of Africa have been compared with that observed in the local-born population, using mortality data from the period 1979–85 and population data from the 1982 French census. Relative risks were adjusted for important confounding factors such as social class and area of residence. Compared with natives, overall mortality from cancer is lower in sub-Saharan African migrants. Higher cancer mortality risks, however, are observed among males for several sites: liver in Central and West Africans; bladder in West Africans; and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in Other African migrants. For females, risks were elevated for nasopharyngeal cancers in Other African and liver in West African migrants. The results are, for the most part, consistent with the few available data on cancer patterns in Africa, and with the patterns observed in African migrants to England and Wales (UK).
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This work was undertaken during the tenure of a Research Training Fellowship awarded to Dr Bouchardy by the International Agency for Research on Cancer, Lyon, France.
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Bouchardy, C., Wanner, P. & Parkin, D.M. Cancer mortality among sub-Saharan African migrants in France. Cancer Causes Control 6, 539–544 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00054163
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00054163