
Cancer rates being studied along the border
Published Tuesday August 26th, 2008


A medical researcher from Maine was in the province last week hunting for clues about why people living in rural counties in his state along the New Brunswick border have higher than average rates of cancer.
“What is so different about this part of the state?” said Dr. Laurent Beauregard of the Institute for Human Genetics and Health in Bangor in a telephone interview.
He was one of the guest speakers at the fourth annual Atlantic Omics Symposium and Expo in Moncton hosted by the Atlantic Cancer Research Institute. Cancer is traditionally thought of as an age-related illness.
But even adjusted for age, Beauregard said, rates for lung, colorectal, prostate and breast cancer are higher in the northern and eastern parts of Maine than in the rest of the United States.
He’s looking at overall information on population characteristics such as the environment, toxins, agriculture or forestry pesticides and herbicides, socio-economic status and access to health care in the northern and eastern counties.
“We feel that somewhere in all of this information is the key to why there is such a high rate of cancer in that region of Maine,” said Beauregard.
That’s why he attended the N.B. symposium.
Beauregard said he suspects the cause is genetic and the genetic profile of the populations in New Brunswick and Maine with their Irish, English, Scottish and French ancestors is similar.
“We feel there are tremendous similarities in our population and our environment,” he said.
“It is a tremendous opportunity to develop good, strong working relationships.”
But Beauregard also said there may be multiple causes for higher cancer rates.
“It is an organized way at looking at very complex sets of data,” he said about his study. “We are approaching this with a very open mind.”
For example, he’s looking at the impact of poverty in the region.
“The areas we are talking about are definitely the areas with the lowest per capita income,” he said.
Beauregard, who has been working on his study for 12 months, said it’s too soon for results.
“There is certainly a long way to go.”
The source of data being used in Beauregard’s study is from the U.S. cancer registry. The most recent information is from 2004.
“We are looking to update this data with Canadian figures as well,” he said.
So far, the researcher doesn’t have specific numbers from New Brunswick showing similar cancer rates between northern and eastern Maine.
“The suggestion is that it might be.’’ He said the field of bioinfometrics is blossoming.
“We think we will start getting some answers over the course of the next 12 to 24 months,” said Beauregard. “Ultimately, our goal is to try to figure out ways to address public health issues to reduce the overall incidents of cancer in our region.’’ Dr. Rodney Ouellette, CEO and director of discoveries at the Atlantic Cancer Research Institute, said Beauregard’s research is interesting.
“I think it is an understudied question,” he said. “We are looking at a situation that is very complex. We are going to be taking notes.”
People often say cancer rates are higher in Atlantic Canada, said Ouellette.
“There are a lot of unanswered questions,” he said.
There’s no similar research going on in this region, although a major, trans-Canada cancer study has just started, and it includes Atlantic Canada.
Ouellette said the institute is studying why some cancers develop at a cellular level rather than researching the illness at the population level.
Research at the institute could lead to better early detection, new diagnostic tools and new therapies, he said.




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