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Cancers of the Gallbladder and Biliary Tract in Alaskan Natives: 1970–791<xref ref-type="fn" rid="fn2">2</xref>
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1982
Year
Alaska Native PopulationGastroenterologyPathologyCholangiopathiesOncologyGastrointestinal OncologySurgical PathologyBiliary DisorderCancer ResearchU.s. WhitesNonmalignant Gallbladder DiseaseBiliary CancersDigestive System DiseasesUrologyEus-guided Gallbladder DrainageHepatologyBiliary TractBiliary CancerGastrointestinal PathologyMedicineAlaskan Natives
The records of Alaskan Native patients with gallbladder and extrahepatic bile duct cancers diagnosed during 1970--79 were reviewed. Of 34 cases identified, the primary cancer was in the gallbladder in 29, resulting in age-adjusted incidence rates for gallbladder cancer of 4.4 for males and 17.6 for females. On the basis of calculations applying cancer incidence rates for U.S. whites to the Alaska Native population, a greater than expected number of both Eskimo and Indian patients were diagnosed. A 5-year review of cholecystectomies indicated that nonmalignant gallbladder disease was also elevated in both Indians and Eskimos.