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"Storm, Hans H"
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Cancer survival in five continents: a worldwide population-based study (CONCORD)
by
Santaquilani, Mariano
,
Quaresma, Manuela
,
Lutz, Jean-Michel
in
Adolescent
,
Adult
,
Age Distribution
2008
Cancer survival varies widely between countries. The CONCORD study provides survival estimates for 1·9 million adults (aged 15–99 years) diagnosed with a first, primary, invasive cancer of the breast (women), colon, rectum, or prostate during 1990–94 and followed up to 1999, by use of individual tumour records from 101 population-based cancer registries in 31 countries on five continents. This is, to our knowledge, the first worldwide analysis of cancer survival, with standard quality-control procedures and identical analytic methods for all datasets.
To compensate for wide international differences in general population (background) mortality by age, sex, country, region, calendar period, and (in the USA) ethnic origin, we estimated relative survival, the ratio of survival noted in the patients with cancer, and the survival that would have been expected had they been subject only to the background mortality rates. 2800 life tables were constructed. Survival estimates were also adjusted for differences in the age structure of populations of patients with cancer.
Global variation in cancer survival was very wide. 5-year relative survival for breast, colorectal, and prostate cancer was generally higher in North America, Australia, Japan, and northern, western, and southern Europe, and lower in Algeria, Brazil, and eastern Europe. CONCORD has provided the first opportunity to estimate cancer survival in 11 states in USA covered by the National Program of Cancer Registries (NPCR), and the study covers 42% of the US population, four-fold more than previously available. Cancer survival in black men and women was systematically and substantially lower than in white men and women in all 16 states and six metropolitan areas included. Relative survival for all ethnicities combined was 2–4% lower in states covered by NPCR than in areas covered by the Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) Program. Age-standardised relative survival by use of the appropriate race-specific and state-specific life tables was up to 2% lower for breast cancer and up to 5% lower for prostate cancer than with the census-derived national life tables used by the SEER Program. These differences in population coverage and analytical method have both contributed to the survival deficit noted between Europe and the USA, from which only SEER data have been available until now.
Until now, direct comparisons of cancer survival between high-income and low-income countries have not generally been available. The information provided here might therefore be a useful stimulus for change. The findings should eventually facilitate joint assessment of international trends in incidence, survival, and mortality as indicators of cancer control.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (Atlanta, GA, USA), Department of Health (London, UK), Cancer Research UK (London, UK).
Journal Article
Mortality from cancer and other causes in commercial airline crews: a joint analysis of cohorts from 10 countries
by
Rafnsson, Vilhjálmur
,
Blettner, Maria
,
Hammer, Gaël P
in
Accidents, Aviation - mortality
,
Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome - etiology
,
Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome - mortality
2014
Background Commercial airline crew is one of the occupational groups with the highest exposures to ionising radiation. Crew members are also exposed to other physical risk factors and subject to potential disruption of circadian rhythms. Methods This study analyses mortality in a pooled cohort of 93 771 crew members from 10 countries. The cohort was followed for a mean of 21.7 years (2.0 million person-years), during which 5508 deaths occurred. Results The overall mortality was strongly reduced in male cockpit (SMR 0.56) and female cabin crews (SMR 0.73). The mortality from radiation-related cancers was also reduced in male cockpit crew (SMR 0.73), but not in female or male cabin crews (SMR 1.01 and 1.00, respectively). The mortality from female breast cancer (SMR 1.06), leukaemia and brain cancer was similar to that of the general population. The mortality from malignant melanoma was elevated, and significantly so in male cockpit crew (SMR 1.57). The mortality from cardiovascular diseases was strongly reduced (SMR 0.46). On the other hand, the mortality from aircraft accidents was exceedingly high (SMR 33.9), as was that from AIDS in male cabin crew (SMR 14.0). Conclusions This large study with highly complete follow-up shows a reduced overall mortality in male cockpit and female cabin crews, an increased mortality of aircraft accidents and an increased mortality in malignant skin melanoma in cockpit crew. Further analysis after longer follow-up is recommended.
Journal Article
Colorectal Cancer Survival in German–Danish Border Regions—A Registry-Based Cohort Study
2023
The aim of this study was (i) to update the reporting of colorectal cancer survival differences over time in the German–Danish border region (Schleswig-Holstein, Southern Denmark, and Zealand) and (ii) to assess the extent to which it can be explained by stage and primary treatment. Incident invasive colorectal cancer cases diagnosed from 2004 to 2016 with a follow-up of vital status through 31 December 2017 were extracted from cancer registries. Analyses were conducted by anatomical subsite and for four consecutive periods. Kaplan–Meier curves and log-rank tests were computed. Cox regression models using data from Schleswig-Holstein from 2004 to 2007 as the reference category were run while controlling for age, sex, stage, and treatment. The cox regression models showed decreasing hazard ratios of death for all three regions over time for both anatomical subsites. The improvement was stronger in the Danish regions, and adjustment for age, sex, stage, and treatment attenuated the results only slightly. In 2014–2016, colon cancer survival was similar across regions, while rectal cancer survival was significantly superior in the Danish regions. Regional survival differences can only partially be explained by differing stage distribution and treatment and may be linked additionally to healthcare system reforms and screening efforts.
Journal Article
Incidence and survival in patients with cutaneous melanoma by morphology, anatomical site and TNM stage: A Danish Population-based Register Study 1989–2011
by
Bay, Christiane
,
Kejs, Anne Mette Tranberg
,
Engholm, Gerda
in
Adolescent
,
Adult
,
Age Distribution
2015
•The increase in incidence of cutaneous malignant melanoma in Denmark in recent years is characterised mainly by lower stage and a higher proportion of superficial spreading tumours.•Greater awareness may explain the incidence increase, but the increase during 2004–2008 can be attributed to modernisation of the Danish Cancer Register.•A relatively large increase in nodular melanoma points to a genuine increase in melanoma risk.•Five-year relative survival has significantly improved in both male and female patients.
The incidence of melanoma of the skin has risen in Denmark in recent decades, the increase being steeper from 2004. It is unclear whether this represents a true rise in incidence or whether it is caused by an increased awareness of the condition.
To assess whether the increase was characterised by early-stage melanomas and a higher proportion of melanomas with superficial spreading morphology, we studied all skin melanoma patients registered in the Danish Cancer Register 1989–2011 (n=27,010) and followed up for death through 2013. Trends in age-standardised incidence by sex, subsite and morphology, relative survival, TNM stage distribution and stage-specific relative survival from 2004 were analysed.
The incidence of melanoma more than doubled over 23 years. A steeper increase from 2004 was driven mainly by superficial spreading tumours, but the proportion of nodular melanomas in patients 50 years of age and over also increased significantly. The largest increase occurred for stage I tumours and for tumours on the trunk. From 1989–1993 to 2009–2011 the 5-year relative survival increased at 12% and 6% points for male and female patients, respectively.
Greater awareness, and thus lower stage at diagnosis (mediated by a large skin cancer prevention campaign from 2007), might explain part of the increase, but the increase in nodular melanoma also points to a genuine increase in the risk of melanoma.
Journal Article
Glomerulonephritis and malignancy: A population-based analysis
by
Birkeland, Sven Arvid
,
Storm, Hans H.
in
Biological and medical sciences
,
cancer
,
cyclin-dependent kinases
2003
Glomerulonephritis and malignancy: A population-based analysis.
An association between glomerulonephritis and malignant tumors has previously both been found and discarded in clinical series, but to our knowledge never has been tested in a population-based setting.
The Danish Kidney Biopsy Registry includes all kidney biopsies performed from 1985. Using a unique personal identification number, each person in the registry to the National Population Registry and the Danish Cancer Registry were linked. Cancer occurrence after the biopsy was compared in patients with morphological, glomerular diseases with that of the general Danish population, taking into account sex, age, calendar period and time since biopsy, and the 95% confidence interval (95% CI) for the observed-to-expected rates was calculated, assuming a Poisson distribution. Cancer occurrence was stratified to <1 year, 1 to 4, and ≥5 years after a biopsy.
A total of 102 de novo cancers were found in 1958 patients. These cancers represent a two- to threefold excess of the expected number at <1 and 1 to 4, but not ≥5 years after a biopsy. Non-Hodgkin's lymphomas were observed six to eight times more than expected. Cancer excess was seen in glomerulonephritides with a known or suspected virus etiology.
The excess cancer rate could be the result of underlying undiagnosed tumors whose antigens have initiated glomerulonephritis, or the immunosuppressive therapy that initiated or energized tumor cells. Based on the findings in our study, there is some support for an association to persistent viruses causing first the glomerulonephritides and then the malignancies, perhaps through a common pathogenesis. This calls for other studies to be done that are specifically designed to investigate this issue, with more data on patient characteristics and confounders.
Journal Article
Survival of breast cancer patients in German-Danish border regions – A registry-based cohort study
by
Pritzkuleit, Ron
,
Rudolph, Christiane E.S.
,
Engholm, Gerda
in
Breast cancer
,
Breast neoplasms
,
Cancer
2021
•Danish-German cross-border analysis of breast cancer survival.•Cancer registry data were analysed using Kaplan-Meier curves and Cox regression.•Lower survival was observed in the Danish regions compared to the German region.•Survival differences diminished after adjustment for time, stage and treatment.•The gap closes due to Denmark’s screening programme and increased adjuvant therapy.
Denmark reports slightly lower breast cancer survival before 2010 than its neighbouring country Germany. Previous research is limited by lacking stage and treatment information. This study aims to investigate differences in breast cancer survival between the bordering regions Schleswig-Holstein (Germany), Southern Denmark and Zealand (Denmark) using registry data including stage and treatment information.
Invasive female breast cancer cases diagnosed during 2004−2013 with follow up through 31st December 2014 were extracted from cancer registries. Cases notified by death certificates only and those aged 90+ years were excluded. Kaplan-Meier curves and log-rank tests were computed. Cox regression analysis was conducted with adjustment for year of diagnosis, age, stage, and treatment.
The analytical sample included 42,966 cases. Kaplan-Meier curves and log-rank tests show significant survival differences between the regions. The Cox regression model adjusted for year of diagnosis and age shows significantly worse overall survival of breast cancer patients in both Danish regions compared to Schleswig-Holstein with hazard ratios (HR) of 1.09 (95 % CI: 1.04; 1.15) for patients from Southern Denmark (SD) and 1.25 (95 % CI: 1.18; 1.32) for residents of Zealand (ZL). This effect diminished after adjustment for stage and treatment (HR: 1.05 (SD), 1.09 (ZL) 95 % CI: 0.99; 1.10 (SD), 1.03; 1.15 (ZL)).
Survival differences can be explained by differing stage distribution and treatment administration, which formerly were more favourable in Schleswig-Holstein. The survival gap will probably close due to Denmark’s national screening program and increased use of adjuvant cancer therapy.
Journal Article
Costs of illness for melanoma and nonmelanoma skin cancer in Denmark
by
Kjellberg, Jakob
,
Phillip, Anja
,
Engholm, Gerda
in
Adult
,
Biological and medical sciences
,
Carcinoma, Basal Cell - economics
2013
Incidences of melanoma and nonmelanoma skin cancer are high and increasing in many countries including Denmark. The diseases are highly preventable. We have estimated the healthcare costs of these cancers by comparing costs for cohorts of patients and matched controls in a national register-based study in Denmark. All incident patients with a diagnosis of melanoma, basal cell carcinoma, or squamous cell carcinoma in the period 2004–2008 were included. Four control individuals for each case were matched in terms of sex, age, and area of residence. Healthcare costs and productivity loss for patients and controls were estimated using Danish health and social registries 3 years before and 3 years after diagnosis. The healthcare costs of melanoma and nonmelanoma skin cancer were €33.3 million in the 3-year period after diagnosis, with male patients inducing the highest costs for all three cancers and costs increasing with age. The diagnoses of basal cell carcinoma and melanoma had almost the same healthcare costs, but per patient average healthcare costs were higher for melanoma. The costs of melanoma and nonmelanoma skin cancers, which can be prevented by sensible sun habits, exceed the costs of the preventive measures of the Danish SunSmart campaign manifold. Costs of melanoma and nonmelanoma skin cancer are expected to increase in the future with populations aging in the western world. The analyses provide a strong argument for the societal rationale of skin cancer prevention in Denmark.
Journal Article
Characteristics of Hodgkin's Lymphoma after Infectious Mononucleosis
2003
In a study of more than 60,000 young adults, a history of infectious mononucleosis significantly increased the risk of Hodgkin's disease, but only disease in which the tumor tissue contained evidence of the Epstein–Barr virus (EBV).
A connection among mononucleosis, EBV, and the development of Hodgkin's disease.
Despite the distinctive epidemiologic characteristics of Hodgkin's lymphoma, its cause is unknown.
1
In young adults, the disease may be a rare consequence of exposure to a common infectious agent.
2
There is, for example, a several-fold increase in the risk of Hodgkin's lymphoma after infectious mononucleosis, the typical clinical manifestation of primary Epstein–Barr virus (EBV) infection in adolescence.
3
The suspicion that EBV has a causal role in Hodgkin's lymphoma is further strengthened by the demonstration of EBV antigens in Reed–Sternberg cells from 40 to 50 percent of patients with Hodgkin's lymphomas.
3
However, there is an apparent discrepancy
4
: the risk of . . .
Journal Article