1. 602Prevalence of cancer history and association with risk factors in a healthy older population
- Author
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John Zalcberg, John J McNeil, Jessica E. Lockery, Anne Murray, Suzanne G Orchard, Galina Polehkina, Rory Wolfe, Mark Nelson, Robyn L. Woods, Peter Gibbs, Brenda Kirpach, Christopher M. Reid, and Andrew Haydon
- Subjects
Aspirin ,Epidemiology ,Colorectal cancer ,Surrogate endpoint ,business.industry ,Cancer ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Older population ,Breast cancer ,medicine ,Self report ,Association (psychology) ,business ,Demography ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background The ASPirin in Reducing Events in the Elderly (ASPREE) study randomised healthy older individuals to 100mg aspirin or placebo, with clinical outcomes and disability-free survival endpoints. Detailed baseline data provides a rare opportunity to explore cancer burden and association with known cancer risk factors in this population. Methods At enrolment (2010-2014), self-reported personal cancer history, cancer type and cancer risk factor data were sought from 19,114 participants (Australia, n = 16,703; U.S., n = 2,411). Participants were healthy and expected to survive 5 years. Results Of those reporting a prior cancer diagnosis (18% women, 22% men), women were diagnosed younger (16% vs 6% of diagnoses Conclusions Personal cancer history in healthy older ASPREE participants was as expected for the most common cancer types in the respective populations. The lack of alignment with known risk factors is attributable to survivor bias, driven by entry criteria, and to possible molecular differences in cancer between elderly and younger people. Key messages As the prevalence of cancer increases with age, the lack of alignment with known risk factors implies other factors play a significant role.
- Published
- 2021
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