According to the statistics collected in 2013, an estimated 310,046 people in the United States suffer from leukemia or are alleviated. The incidence of all types of leukemia in male outbreaks is higher than females and it is estimated that men account for about 57% of new cases of leukemia. It is the tenth most common type of cancer in all races or races. However, the incidence of non-Hispanic whites is highest (13,600), the incidence of the Asian and Pacific islanders (7,400) and American Indians and Alaska Natives (7,300) is the lowest.
Many kinds of leukemia, especially acute leukemia in childhood, seems to have little relation with dietary habits. However, with CLL, the most common type of leukemia in adults in the United States, diet therapy may work. In a study conducted in Spain in 2018, it turned out that those who ate Western-style meals had 63% CLL higher than those who ate careful meals or Mediterranean meals. Sucralose (a brand such as Splenda) was approved in 1999 and currently there are thousands of products all over the world. Despite numerous relief studies before approval, the Italian mouse study in 2016 showed that the risk of leukemia in the lifetime of rodents exposed to sucralose (starting in utero) was significantly higher It was. It is important to note that this is an animal experiment giving a dose equivalent to four times the average daily intake of sucralose by adults.
About one-third of children with certain types of cancer are leukemia. The most common is acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Leukemia is the second most common form of cancer in infants (less than 12 months), the most common form of cancer in older children. Boys are more likely to develop leukemia than girls and white Americans have the potential to develop leukemia as much as twice as many as those of African American children. About 3% of adults' cancer is diagnosed as leukemia, but cancer is common in adults, so more than 90% of leukemia is diagnosed in adults.