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The overall impact of environment in the
broadest sense of the term is reflected in the international variation in
cancer incidence, with the differential in rates between high to low
incidence populations as great as 50 to 150-fold for melanoma and cancers of
the nasal pharynx, the prostate and the liver. However, even for these
tumors, genetic factors associated with ethnicity cannot be discounted. They
contribute to the patterns of melanoma that depend on the degree of skin
pigmentation as well as sun exposure of the population, and they contribute
to the excess of nasal pharyngeal cancer in the Chinese population and to
the excess of prostate cancer in African Americans as suggested by recent
genome-wide studies. |