Age-period-cohort analysis of oral cancer mortality in Europe: The end of an epidemic?

被引:36
作者
Bonifazi, Martina [1 ,2 ]
Malvezzi, Matteo [1 ,3 ,4 ]
Bertuccio, Paola [1 ,3 ]
Edefonti, Valeria [3 ]
Garavello, Werner [1 ,5 ]
Levi, Fabio [6 ,7 ]
La Vecchia, Carlo [1 ,3 ]
Negri, Eva [1 ]
机构
[1] Ist Ric Farmacol Mario Negri, I-20156 Milan, Italy
[2] Univ Politecn Marche, Ist Clin Med, Ancona, Italy
[3] Univ Milan, Sez Stat Med Biomet Giulio A Maccacaro, Clin Lavoro Luigi Devoto, Dipartimento Med Lavoro, I-20122 Milan, Italy
[4] Fdn IRCCS, Ist Nazl Tumori, Struttura Complessa Stat Med Biomet & Bioinformat, Milan, Italy
[5] Univ Milan, DNTB, Clin Otorinolaringoiatr, Milan, Italy
[6] CHU Vaudois, Unite Epidemiol Canc, Lausanne, Switzerland
[7] CHU Vaudois, Inst Med Sociale & Prevent, Fac Biol Med, Registres Vaudois & Neuchatelois Tumeurs, Lausanne, Switzerland
关键词
Oral cancer; Pharyngeal cancer; Mortality; Europe; Age-period-cohort analysis; TEMPORAL VARIATION; MODELS; RISK; CESSATION; RATES;
D O I
10.1016/j.oraloncology.2010.06.010
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
Over the last decade, mortality from oral and pharyngeal cancer has been declining in most European countries, but it had been increasing substantially in Hungary, Slovakia and a few other countries of central Europe, reaching rates comparable to those of lung cancer in several western European countries in males. To update trends in oral cancer mortality and further analyse the recent epidemic in central Europe, official death certifications for oral and pharyngeal cancer for 37 European countries were derived over the period 1970-2007, and an age-period-cohort model was fitted for selected countries. Male oral cancer mortality continued to decline in most European countries, including the Russian Federation, and, more importantly, it also started to decline in some of the countries with the highest male rates, i.e. Hungary and Slovakia; persisting rises were, however, observed in Belarus, Bulgaria and Romania. Oral cancer mortality rates for women were lower than in men and showed no appreciable trend over recent periods in the EU overall. Estimates from the age-period-cohort analysis for most selected countries showed a fall in effects for the cohorts born after the 1950s. For the period effect displayed a rise for the earlier periods, an inversion in the 1990s and a continuous fall up to the last studied period. Only some former non-market economy countries, like Romania, Ukraine and Lithuania, had rising cohort effect trends up to most recent generations. The major finding of this updated analysis of oral cancer mortality is the leveling of the epidemic for men in most European countries, including Hungary and other central European countries, where mortality from this cancer was exceedingly high. These trends essentially reflect the changes in alcohol and tobacco consumption in various populations. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:400 / 407
页数:8
相关论文
共 30 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 2004, Tobacco Smoke and Involuntary Smoking
[2]  
[Anonymous], 2008, WHO report on the global tobacco epidemic, 2008: The MPOWER package
[3]  
[Anonymous], WHO MORT DAT
[4]   Tobacco smoking, smoking cessation, and cumulative risk of upper aerodigestive tract cancers [J].
Bosetti, Cristina ;
Gallus, Silvano ;
Peto, Richard ;
Negri, Eva ;
Talamini, Renato ;
Tavani, Alessandra ;
Franceschi, Silvia ;
La Vecchia, Carlo .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2008, 167 (04) :468-473
[5]   Worldwide mortality from cirrhosis: An update to 2002 [J].
Bosetti, Cristina ;
Levi, Fabio ;
Lucchini, Franca ;
Zatonski, Witold A. ;
Negri, Eva ;
La Vecchia, Carlo .
JOURNAL OF HEPATOLOGY, 2007, 46 (05) :827-839
[6]   MODELS FOR TEMPORAL VARIATION IN CANCER RATES .1. AGE PERIOD AND AGE COHORT MODELS [J].
CLAYTON, D ;
SCHIFFLERS, E .
STATISTICS IN MEDICINE, 1987, 6 (04) :449-467
[7]   MODELS FOR TEMPORAL VARIATION IN CANCER RATES .2. AGE PERIOD COHORT MODELS [J].
CLAYTON, D ;
SCHIFFLERS, E .
STATISTICS IN MEDICINE, 1987, 6 (04) :469-481
[8]  
DeCarli LaVecchia., 1987, REV STATISTICA APPLI, V20, P397
[9]   THE CAUSES OF CANCER - QUANTITATIVE ESTIMATES OF AVOIDABLE RISKS OF CANCER IN THE UNITED-STATES TODAY [J].
DOLL, R ;
PETO, R .
JNCI-JOURNAL OF THE NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE, 1981, 66 (06) :1191-+
[10]  
DOLL R, 1982, IARC SCI PUBL, V42, P671