The
Orlando Sentinel 

(1/20, Jameson) reported, "Men are at higher risk of getting 32 out of
35 cancers, according to an international study, which further suggests
that the greatest reason for the gap lies in biology." Researchers
found that, "for 15 cancers, the risk for men is twice that for women."
The study, published in the European Journal of Epidemiology, also
found that "for five cancers -- larynx, hypopharynx, lip, bladder and
Kaposi sarcoma -- men have a four-times
greater risk."
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