Khabor Wala Desk
Published: 29th July 2025, 3:46 PM
The number of liver cancer cases worldwide is projected to nearly double by 2050, reaching 1.52 million new diagnoses annually, unless greater efforts are made to tackle preventable risk factors such as obesity, alcohol consumption, and viral hepatitis, a new study warns.
The findings, published in The Lancet medical journal using data from the Global Cancer Observatory, present a stark outlook on one of the deadliest cancers globally, which is currently the sixth most common and the third deadliest form of cancer.
Global Projections for Liver Cancer
| Indicator | Current (2022) | Projected (2050) |
| New liver cancer cases annually | 870,000 | 1.52 million |
| Annual liver cancer deaths | – | 1.37 million |
| % preventable cases | – | 60% (approx.) |
Major Preventable Risk Factors
The study identifies three main causes of liver cancer, all of which are significantly preventable with early intervention:
Global Action Urgently Needed
The study, released on World Hepatitis Day, highlights the critical need for international action, with researchers urging:
“There is a pressing global need to address these preventable risk factors before liver cancer becomes an even greater public health burden,” the authors concluded.
This comprehensive study reiterates that while liver cancer poses an escalating threat, 60% of future cases could still be avoided with early interventions, improved awareness, and proactive public health policies.
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