28 results on '"Ferretti, Stefano"'
Search Results
2. Incidence of Vulvar Lichen Sclerosus and of Cancer Among Vulvar Lichen Sclerosus Patients: Does Socioeconomic Status Have a Role?
- Author
-
Borghi A, Ferretti S, Pacetti L, Falcini F, and Corazza M
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Incidence, Retrospective Studies, Social Class, Vulvar Lichen Sclerosus complications, Vulvar Lichen Sclerosus epidemiology, Neoplasms
- Abstract
Objective: Socioeconomic status (SES) impacts on the incidence of many inflammatory diseases and cancers, but there is no evidence on its implication in vulvar lichen sclerosus (VLS). The authors aimed to assess possible associations between SES and both occurrence of VLS and cancer occurrence among VLS patients., Materials and Methods: A retrospective cohort of women resident in the province of Ferrara, Italy, affected with VLS diagnosed between 2001 and 2020, was investigated for assessing any association of SES with VLS and cancer incidence. The SES was expressed through an ecological-based deprivation index identifying 5 subgroups., Result: Four-hundred women were diagnosed with VLS during the study period, with double the number of cases in the second decade (2011-2020) compared with the first (2001-2010). More VLS patients belonged to the high rather than the low SES groups (p = .032). From VLS diagnosis to 2018 (1,958.4 total person*years at risk), 22 patients received their first diagnosis of cancer, mainly the skin, breast, and vulva. No significant differences in cancer incidence were found between high/medium-high and low/medium-low SES subjects., Conclusions: The fact that more VLS patients belonged to the highest socioeconomic classes may be due to a more frequent diagnosis in those with greater health seeking behavior and resources. An involvement of SES-related factors in VLS pathophysiological background can also be taken into consideration. Both the lack of marked social and economic differences in the study area and the availability of free visits and screening may account for the lack of association between SES and cancer development., Competing Interests: The authors have declared they have no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2023, ASCCP.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Liquid Biopsy at Home: Delivering Precision Medicine for Patients with Cancer During the COVID-19 Pandemic.
- Author
-
Napolitano S, Caputo V, Ventriglia A, Martini G, Della Corte CM, De Falco V, Ferretti S, Martinelli E, Morgillo F, Ciardiello D, De Vita F, Orditura M, Fasano M, Ciardiello F, and Troiani T
- Subjects
- Humans, Liquid Biopsy, Pandemics, Precision Medicine, COVID-19 epidemiology, Neoplasms epidemiology, Neoplasms therapy
- Abstract
CoronaVirus disease-2019 has changed the delivery of health care worldwide and the pandemic has challenged oncologists to reorganize cancer care. Recently, progress has been made in the field of precision medicine to provide to patients with cancer the best therapeutic choice for their individual needs. In this context, the Foundation Medicine (FMI)-Liquid@Home project has emerged as a key weapon to deal with the new pandemic situation. FoundationOne Liquid Assay (F1L) is a next-generation sequences-based liquid biopsy service, able to detect 324 molecular alterations and genomic signatures, from May 2020 available at patients' home (FMI-Liquid@Home). We analyzed time and costs saving for patients with cancer, their caregivers and National Healthcare System (NHS) with FMI-Liquid@Home versus F1L performed at our Department. Different variables have been evaluated. Between May 2020 and August 2021, 218 FMI-Liquid@Home were performed for patients with cancer in Italy. Among these, our Department performed 153 FMI-Liquid@Home with the success rate of 98% (vs. 95% for F1L in the hospital). Time saving for patients and their caregivers was 494.86 and 427.36 hours, respectively, and costs saving was 13 548.70€. Moreover, for working people these savings were 1084.71 hours and 31 239.65€, respectively. In addition, the total gain for the hospital was 163.5 hours and 6785€, whereas for NHS was 1084.71 hours and 51 573.60€, respectively. FMI-Liquid@Home service appears to be useful and convenient allowing time and costs saving for patients, caregivers, and NHS. Born during the COVID-19 pandemic, it could be integrated in oncological daily routine in the future. Therefore, additional studies are needed to better understand the overall gain and how to integrate this service in different countries., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Continuing our work: transplant surgery and surgical oncology in a tertiary referral COVID-19 center.
- Author
-
Berardi G, Colasanti M, Levi Sandri GB, Del Basso C, Ferretti S, Laurenzi A, Guglielmo N, Meniconi RL, Antonini M, D'Offizi G, and Ettorre GM
- Subjects
- Aged, COVID-19, Female, Humans, Italy, Male, Middle Aged, Surgical Procedures, Operative statistics & numerical data, Time Factors, Coronavirus Infections, Kidney Transplantation statistics & numerical data, Liver Transplantation statistics & numerical data, Neoplasms surgery, Pandemics, Pneumonia, Viral, Tertiary Care Centers
- Abstract
COVID-19 is rapidly spreading worldwide. Healthcare systems are struggling to properly allocate resources while ensuring cure for diseases outside of the infection. The aim of this study was to demonstrate how surgical activity was affected by the virus outbreak and show the changes in practice in a tertiary referral COVID-19 center. The official bulletins of the Italian National Institute for the Infectious Diseases "L. Spallanzani" were reviewed to retrieve the number of daily COVID-19 patients. Records of consecutive oncological and transplant procedures performed during the outbreak were reviewed. Patients with a high probability of postoperative intensive care unit (ICU) admission were considered as high risk and defined by an ASA score ≥ III and/or a Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI) ≥ 6 and/or a Revised Cardiac Risk Index for Preoperative Risk (RCRI) ≥ 3. 72 patients were operated, including 12 (16.6%) liver and kidney transplantations. Patients had few comorbidities (26.3%), low ASA score (1.9 ± 0.5), CCI (3.7 ± 1.3), and RCRI (1.2 ± 0.6) and had overall a low risk of postoperative ICU admission. Few patients had liver cirrhosis (12.5%) or received preoperative systemic therapy (16.6%). 36 (50%) high-risk surgical procedures were performed, including major hepatectomies, pancreaticoduodenectomies, total gastrectomies, multivisceral resections, and transplantations. Despite this, only 15 patients (20.8%) were admitted to the ICU. Only oncologic cases and transplantations were performed during the COVID-19 outbreak. Careful selection of patients allowed to perform major cancer surgeries and transplantations without further stressing hospital resources, meanwhile minimizing collateral damage to patients.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Prognosis and cure of long-term cancer survivors: A population-based estimation.
- Author
-
Dal Maso L, Panato C, Guzzinati S, Serraino D, Francisci S, Botta L, Capocaccia R, Tavilla A, Gigli A, Crocetti E, Rugge M, Tagliabue G, Filiberti RA, Carrozzi G, Michiara M, Ferretti S, Cesaraccio R, Tumino R, Falcini F, Stracci F, Torrisi A, Mazzoleni G, Fusco M, Rosso S, Tisano F, Fanetti AC, Sini GM, Buzzoni C, and De Angelis R
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Italy epidemiology, Life Expectancy, Male, Middle Aged, Models, Theoretical, Neoplasms mortality, Prognosis, Time Factors, Young Adult, Cancer Survivors statistics & numerical data, Neoplasms classification, Neoplasms epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Increasing evidence of cure for some neoplasms has emerged in recent years. The study aimed to estimate population-based indicators of cancer cure., Methods: Information on more than half a million cancer patients aged 15-74 years collected by population-based Italian cancer registries and mixture cure models were used to estimate the life expectancy of fatal tumors (LEFT), proportions of patients with similar death rates of the general population (cure fraction), and time to reach 5-year conditional relative survival (CRS) >90% or 95% (time to cure)., Results: Between 1990 and 2000, the median LEFT increased >1 year for breast (from 8.1 to 9.4 years) and prostate cancers (from 5.2 to 7.4 years). Median LEFT in 1990 was >5 years for testicular cancers (5.8) and Hodgkin lymphoma (6.3) below 45 years of age. In both sexes, it was ≤0.5 years for pancreatic cancers and NHL in 1990 and in 2000. The cure fraction showed a 10% increase between 1990 and 2000. It was 95% for thyroid cancer in women, 94% for testis, 75% for prostate, 67% for breast cancers, and <20% for liver, lung, and pancreatic cancers. Time to 5-year CRS >95% was <10 years for testis, thyroid, colon cancers, and melanoma. For breast and prostate cancers, the 5-year CRS >90% was reached in <10 years but a small excess remained for >15 years., Conclusions: The study findings confirmed that several cancer types are curable. Became aware of the possibility of cancer cure has relevant clinical and social impacts., (© 2019 The Authors. Cancer Medicine published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Characteristics of people living in Italy after a cancer diagnosis in 2010 and projections to 2020.
- Author
-
Guzzinati S, Virdone S, De Angelis R, Panato C, Buzzoni C, Capocaccia R, Francisci S, Gigli A, Zorzi M, Tagliabue G, Serraino D, Falcini F, Casella C, Russo AG, Stracci F, Caruso B, Michiara M, Caiazzo AL, Castaing M, Ferretti S, Mangone L, Rudisi G, Sensi F, Mazzoleni G, Pannozzo F, Tumino R, Fusco M, Ricci P, Gola G, Giacomin A, Tisano F, Candela G, Fanetti AC, Pala F, Sardo AS, Rugge M, Botta L, and Dal Maso L
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Age Distribution, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Forecasting, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Italy epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Prevalence, Registries, Sex Distribution, Young Adult, Neoplasms epidemiology, Survivors statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: Estimates of cancer prevalence are widely based on limited duration, often including patients living after a cancer diagnosis made in the previous 5 years and less frequently on complete prevalence (i.e., including all patients regardless of the time elapsed since diagnosis). This study aims to provide estimates of complete cancer prevalence in Italy by sex, age, and time since diagnosis for all cancers combined, and for selected cancer types. Projections were made up to 2020, overall and by time since diagnosis., Methods: Data were from 27 Italian population-based cancer registries, covering 32% of the Italian population, able to provide at least 7 years of registration as of December 2009 and follow-up of vital status as of December 2013. The data were used to compute the limited-duration prevalence, in order to estimate the complete prevalence by means of the COMPREV software., Results: In 2010, 2,637,975 persons were estimated to live in Italy after a cancer diagnosis, 1.2 million men and 1.4 million women, or 4.6% of the Italian population. A quarter of male prevalent cases had prostate cancer (n = 305,044), while 42% of prevalent women had breast cancer (n = 604,841). More than 1.5 million people (2.7% of Italians) were alive since 5 or more years after diagnosis and 20% since ≥15 years. It is projected that, in 2020 in Italy, there will be 3.6 million prevalent cancer cases (+ 37% vs 2010). The largest 10-year increases are foreseen for prostate (+ 85%) and for thyroid cancers (+ 79%), and for long-term survivors diagnosed since 20 or more years (+ 45%). Among the population aged ≥75 years, 22% will have had a previous cancer diagnosis., Conclusions: The number of persons living after a cancer diagnosis is estimated to rise of approximately 3% per year in Italy. The availability of detailed estimates and projections of the complete prevalence are intended to help the implementation of guidelines aimed to enhance the long-term follow-up of cancer survivors and to contribute their rehabilitation needs.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. [TNM Classification of malignant tumours - Eighth edition: which news?]
- Author
-
Patriarca S, Ferretti S, and Zanetti R
- Subjects
- Adult, Child, Guidelines as Topic, Humans, International Agencies trends, Italy epidemiology, Neoplasm Grading, Neoplasm Staging, Neoplasms pathology, Prognosis, Registries, Neoplasms classification, Neoplasms epidemiology
- Abstract
The eighth edition of TNM classification of malignant tumours has been published by the Union for International Cancer Control in January 2017. As for the previous editions - from the third on - it has been translated into Italian and recently published in our Country. This article explains the main changes from the previous edition: new classifications, some major revisions of cancer staging rules, the introduction of a grid of prognostic factors for each neoplasia and the addition of two chapters. These two chapters are about the essential TNM and the paediatric tumours, and have been developed in order to facilitate the use of data by Cancer Registries.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Survival after cancer in Italian persons with AIDS, 1986-2005: a population-based estimation.
- Author
-
Dal Maso L, Suligoi B, Franceschi S, Braga C, Buzzoni C, Polesel J, Zucchetto A, Piselli P, Falcini F, Caldarella A, Zanetti R, Vercelli M, Guzzinati S, Russo A, Tagliabue G, Iachetta F, Ferretti S, Limina RM, Mangone L, Michiara M, Stracci F, Pirino DR, Piffer S, Giacomin A, Vitarelli S, Mazzoleni G, Iannelli A, Contrino ML, Fusco M, Tumino R, Fanetti AC, De Paoli P, Decarli A, and Serraino D
- Subjects
- Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome epidemiology, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome mortality, Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Italy epidemiology, Lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin complications, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasms epidemiology, Neoplasms mortality, Registries, Survival Analysis, Young Adult, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome complications, Lymphoma, AIDS-Related mortality, Lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin mortality, Neoplasms complications, Sarcoma, Kaposi mortality
- Abstract
Background: Cancer survival in persons with AIDS (PWA) after introduction of antiretroviral therapies remains poorly characterized. The aim is to provide population-based estimates of cancer survival, overall and for the most important cancer types in PWA, and a comparison with persons without AIDS (non-PWA) affected by the same cancer., Methods: PWA with cancer at AIDS diagnosis or thereafter were individually matched with non-PWA by type of cancer, sex, age, year of diagnosis, area of living, and, for lymphomas, histological subtype. Five-year observed survival and hazard ratios (HRs) of death in PWA versus non-PWA with 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were estimated., Results: We included 2262 Italian PWA and 4602 non-PWA with cancer diagnosed during 1986-2005. Between 1986 and 1995, and 1996 and 2005, 5-year survival for all cancers in PWA improved from 12% to 41% and the corresponding HR versus non-PWA decreased from 5.1 (95% CI: 4.3 to 6.1) to 2.9 (95% CI: 2.6 to 3.3). During 1996-2005, HRs were 2.0 (95% CI: 1.4 to 2.9) for Kaposi sarcoma, 3.4 (95% CI: 2.9 to 4.1) for non-Hodgkin lymphoma, and 2.4 (95% CI: 1.4 to 4.0) for cervical cancer. HRs were 2.5 (95% CI: 2.1 to 3.1) for all non-AIDS-defining cancers, 5.9 (95% CI: 3.1 to 11.2) for Hodgkin lymphoma, and 7.3 (95% CI: 2.8 to 19.2) for nonmelanoma skin cancer. A ≤3-fold survival difference was found for cancers of the stomach, liver, anus, lung, brain, and the most aggressive lymphoma subtypes., Conclusions: The persisting, although narrowing, gap in cancer survival between PWA and non-PWA indicates the necessity of enhancing therapeutic approaches, so that PWA can be provided the same chances of survival observed in the general population, and improving cancer prevention and screening.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. [After the increasing trend in the Nineties, in Italy incidence of tumours in children (0-14 years) is decreasing].
- Author
-
Buzzoni C, Ferretti S, and Dal Maso L
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Humans, Incidence, Infant, Italy epidemiology, Time Factors, Neoplasms epidemiology
- Published
- 2014
10. Cancer incidence in Italian contaminated sites.
- Author
-
Comba P, Ricci P, Iavarone I, Pirastu R, Buzzoni C, Fusco M, Ferretti S, Fazzo L, Pasetto R, Zona A, and Crocetti E
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Environmental Exposure, Female, Humans, Incidence, Italy epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Environmental Pollution adverse effects, Neoplasms epidemiology
- Abstract
Introduction: The incidence of cancer among residents in sites contaminated by pollutants with a possible health impact is not adequately studied. In Italy, SENTIERI Project (Epidemiological study of residents in National Priority Contaminated Sites, NPCSs) was implemented to study major health outcomes for residents in 44 NPCSs., Methods: The Italian Association of Cancer Registries (AIRTUM) records cancer incidence in 23 NPCSs. For each NPCSs, the incidence of all malignant cancers combined and 35 cancer sites (coded according to ICD-10), was analysed (1996-2005). The observed cases were compared to the expected based on age (5-year period,18 classes), gender, calendar period (1996-2000; 2001-2005), geographical area (North-Centre and Centre-South) and cancer sites specific rates. Standardized Incidence Ratios (SIR) with 90% Confidence Intervals were computed., Results: In both genders an excess was observed for overall cancer incidence (9% in men and 7% in women) as well as for specific cancer sites (colon and rectum, liver, gallblad-der, pancreas, lung, skin melanoma, bladder and Non Hodgkin lymphoma). Deficits were observed for gastric cancer in both genders, chronic lymphoid leukemia (men), malignant thyroid neoplasms, corpus uteri and connective and soft-tissue tumours and sarcomas (women)., Discussion: This report is, to our knowledge, the first one on cancer risk of residents in NPCSs. The study, although not aiming to estimate the cancer burden attributable to the environment as compared to occupation or life-style, supports the credibility of an etiologic role of environmental exposures in contaminated sites. Ongoing analyses focus on the interpretation of risk factors for excesses of specific cancer types overall and in specific NPCSs in relation to the presence of carcinogenic pollutants.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Estimates of cancer burden in Emilia-Romagna.
- Author
-
Falcini F, Mancini S, Ravaioli A, Vattiato R, Bucchi L, Ferretti S, Michiara M, Federico M, Ponz de Leon M, Mangone L, Rossi S, and Foschi R
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Breast Neoplasms epidemiology, Colorectal Neoplasms epidemiology, Cost of Illness, Female, Humans, Incidence, Italy epidemiology, Lung Neoplasms epidemiology, Male, Melanoma epidemiology, Middle Aged, Neoplasms mortality, Prevalence, Prostatic Neoplasms epidemiology, Registries, Sex Distribution, Skin Neoplasms epidemiology, Stomach Neoplasms epidemiology, Survival Rate trends, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms epidemiology, Neoplasms epidemiology
- Abstract
Aims and Background: This paper aims to provide a comprehensive overview of mid-term epidemiological trends for the major cancer sites in the Emilia-Romagna region of northern Italy (population 4,400,000)., Methods: The MIAMOD method, a back-calculation approach to estimate and project the incidence of chronic diseases from mortality and patient survival, was used for the estimation of incidence and prevalence by calendar year (from 1970 to 2015) and age (from 0 to 99). Survival estimates were taken from cancer registries of northeastern Italy., Results: The estimated incidence of stomach cancer decreased by approximately 75% for both sexes. Trends in incidence of colorectal cancer differed between males and females. For females, the rate increased moderately until the year 2000 with a slow decrease thereafter, whereas the male colorectal cancer incidence showed a regular increase until 2010 followed by a substantial leveling off. Among males the lung cancer incidence and mortality rates showed a steep increase until the late 1980s and a rapid decrease thereafter. Among females, the trends were increasing over the entire study period. The estimated incidence of female breast cancer rose sharply between 1970 and 2001, but from that year onwards a slightly decreasing trend was observed. Mortality peaked in 1988 and has fallen since. The incidence of prostate cancer showed a 3-fold increase. After 2005, the rate is expected to stabilize. Among females, the estimated prevalence increased for breast cancer (52,700 cases expected in 2015), colorectal cancer, lung cancer and melanoma, while decreasing for stomach cancer and cervical cancer. Among males, the estimates showed an upward trend for prostate cancer (32,100 cases expected in 2015) and colorectal cancer, and a leveling off for lung cancer after 2010., Conclusion: The estimates were fairly consistent with previous data from several epidemiological sources. The MIAMOD method provided a picture of the impressive increase in the prevalence of breast cancer and prostate cancer over the 45-year period studied.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Regional inequalities in cancer care persist in Italy and can influence survival.
- Author
-
Sant M, Minicozzi P, Allemani C, Cirilli C, Federico M, Capocaccia R, Budroni M, Candela P, Crocetti E, Falcini F, Ferretti S, Fusco M, Giacomin A, La Rosa F, Mangone L, Natali M, Leon MP, Traina A, Tumino R, and Zambon P
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Humans, Italy epidemiology, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Staging, Neoplasms pathology, Registries, Socioeconomic Factors, Survival Analysis, Young Adult, Health Services Accessibility statistics & numerical data, Neoplasms mortality, Neoplasms therapy
- Abstract
Background: Population-based cancer registry studies of care patterns can help elucidate reasons for the marked geographic variation in cancer survival across Italy. The article provides a snapshot of the care delivered to cancer patients in Italy., Methods: Random samples of adult patients with skin melanoma, breast, colon and non-small cell lung cancers diagnosed in 2003-2005 were selected from 14 Italian cancer registries. Logistic models estimated odds of receiving standard care (conservative surgery plus radiotherapy for early breast cancer; surgery plus chemotherapy for Dukes C colon cancer; surgery for lung cancer; sentinel node biopsy for >1mm melanoma, vs. other treatment) in each registry compared to the entire sample (reference)., Results: Stage at diagnosis for breast, colon and melanoma was earlier in north/central than southern registries. Odds of receiving standard care were lower than reference in Sassari (0.68, 95%CI 0.51-0.90) and Napoli (0.48, 95%CI 0.35-0.67) for breast cancer; did not differ across registries for Dukes C colon cancer; were higher in Romagna (3.77, 95%CI 1.67-8.50) and lower in Biella (0.38, 95%CI 0.18-0.82) for lung cancer; and were higher in Reggio Emilia (2.37, 95%CI 1.12-5.02) and lower in Ragusa (0.27, 95%CI 0.14-0.54) for melanoma., Conclusions: Notwithstanding limitations due to variations in the availability of clinical information and differences in stage distribution between north/central and southern registries, our study shows that important disparities in cancer care persist across Italy. Thus the public health priority of reducing cancer survival disparities will not be achieved in the immediate future., (Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. The burden of rare cancers in Italy: the surveillance of rare cancers in Italy (RITA) project.
- Author
-
Trama A, Mallone S, Ferretti S, Meduri F, Capocaccia R, and Gatta G
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Age Distribution, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Child, Child, Preschool, Humans, Incidence, Infant, Italy epidemiology, Middle Aged, Neoplasms mortality, Prevalence, Rare Diseases mortality, Registries, Survival Rate, Neoplasms epidemiology, Population Surveillance, Rare Diseases epidemiology
- Abstract
Aims and Background: The project Surveillance of rare cancers in Italy (RITA) provides, for the first time, estimates of the burden of rare cancers in Italy based on the list of rare cancers proposed in collaboration with the European project Surveillance of Rare Cancers in Europe (RARECARE)., Methods: RITA analyzed data from Italian population-based cancer registries (CR). The period of diagnosis was 1988 to 2002, and vital status information was available up to December 31, 2003. Incidence rates were estimated for the period 1995-2002, survival for the years 2000-2002 (with the period method of Brenner), and complete prevalence at January 1, 2003., Results: Rare cancers are those with an incidence <6/100,000/year. In Italy, every year there are 60,000 new diagnoses of rare cancers corresponding to 15% of all new cancer diagnoses. Five-year relative survival was on the average worse for rare cancers (53%) than for common cancers (73%). A total of 770,000 patients were living in Italy in 2008 with a diagnosis of a rare cancer, 22% of the total cancer prevalence., Conclusions: Our estimates constitute a useful base for further research and support the idea that rare cancers are a public health problem that deserves attention. Centers of expertise for rare cancers that pool cases, expertise and resources could ensure an adequate clinical management for these diseases. Our data also showed that cancer registries are suitable sources of data to estimate incidence, prevalence and survival for rare cancers and should continue to monitoring rare cancers in Italy.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. [Italian cancer figures: North and South are getting closer].
- Author
-
Ferretti S, Crocetti E, and Buzzoni C
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Italy epidemiology, Male, Socioeconomic Factors, Neoplasms epidemiology
- Published
- 2011
15. Cancer incidence in people with AIDS in Italy.
- Author
-
Polesel J, Franceschi S, Suligoi B, Crocetti E, Falcini F, Guzzinati S, Vercelli M, Zanetti R, Tagliabue G, Russo A, Luminari S, Stracci F, De Lisi V, Ferretti S, Mangone L, Budroni M, Limina RM, Piffer S, Serraino D, Bellù F, Giacomin A, Donato A, Madeddu A, Vitarelli S, Fusco M, Tessandori R, Tumino R, Piselli P, Dal Maso L, Lise M, Zucchetto A, De Paoli A, Intrieri T, Vattiato R, Zambon P, Puppo A, Patriarca S, Tittarelli A, Autelitano M, Cirilli C, La Rosa F, Sgargi P, Di Felice E, Cesaraccio R, Donato F, Franchini S, Zanier L, Vittadello F, Vercellino PC, Senatore G, Contrino ML, Antonini S, Palombino R, Maspero S, La Rosa MG, Camoni L, and Regine V
- Subjects
- Humans, Incidence, Italy epidemiology, Neoplasms complications, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome complications, Neoplasms epidemiology
- Abstract
People with HIV/AIDS (PWHA) have increased risk of some cancers. The introduction of highly active antiretroviral therapies (HAART) has improved their life expectancy, exposing them to the combined consequences of aging and of a prolonged exposure to cancer risk factors. The aim of this study was to estimate incidence rates (IR) in PWHA in Italy, before and after the introduction of HAART, after adjusting for sex and age through direct standardization. An anonymous record linkage between Italian AIDS Registry (21,951 cases) and Cancer Registries (17.3 million, 30% of Italian population) was performed. In PWHA, crude IR, sex- and age-standardized IR and age-specific IR were estimated. The standardized IR for Kaposi sarcoma and non-Hodgkin lymphoma greatly declined in the HAART period. Although the crude IR for all non-AIDS-defining cancers increased in the HAART period, standardized IR did not significantly differ in the 2 periods (352 and 379/100,000, respectively). Increases were seen only for cancer of the liver (IR ratio = 4.6, 95% CI: 1.3-17.0) and lung (IR ratio = 1.8, 95% CI: 1.0-3.2). Age-specific IRs for liver and lung cancers, however, largely overlapped in the 2 periods pointing to the strong influence of the shift in the age distribution of PWHA on the observed upward trends. In conclusion, standardized IRs for non-AIDS-defining cancers have not risen in the HAART period, even if crude IRs of these cancers increased. This scenario calls, however, for the intensification of cancer-prevention strategies, notably smoking cessation and screening programs, in middle-aged HIV-patients.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. [TNM classification of malignant tumours, VII edition 2009. Changes and practical effects on cancer epidemiology].
- Author
-
Ferretti S, Patriarca S, Carbone A, and Zanetti R
- Subjects
- Humans, Italy, Neoplasm Staging, Neoplasms epidemiology, Neoplasms classification
- Abstract
The seventh edition of TNM classification of malignant tumours has been published by the International Union against Cancer in late 2009 and it is now available also in Italian language. This new edition introduces some major revisions and several updates of cancer staging rules. New criteria based on pathological details, biological assessment of lesions and new prognostic groupings have been established. Clinicians, pathologists, epidemiologists have now the chance to get familiar with those novelties, that are expected to be of great help in a moment like the present one, when strong evolutions occur in the strategies of diagnosis and of treatment of cancer.
- Published
- 2010
17. Estimated and observed cancer incidence in Italy: a validation study.
- Author
-
Capocaccia R, Buzzoni C, Grande E, Inghelmann R, Bellù F, Cassetti T, de Dottori M, Donato A, De Lisi V, Falcini F, Federico M, Ferretti S, Fusco M, Giacomin A, Guzzinati S, Mangone L, Piffer S, Rosso S, Sechi O, Tagliabue G, Tumino R, Vercelli M, and Vitarelli S
- Subjects
- Breast Neoplasms epidemiology, Colorectal Neoplasms epidemiology, Female, Humans, Incidence, Italy epidemiology, Lung Neoplasms epidemiology, Male, Prostatic Neoplasms epidemiology, Registries, Sex Distribution, Stomach Neoplasms epidemiology, Neoplasms epidemiology
- Abstract
Aims and Background: The study aimed to validate model-based incidence estimates by means of observed incidence rates provided by Italian cancer registries, for five major cancer sites (stomach, colon and rectum, lung, breast and prostate cancers) and for all cancers together., Methods: Recent incidence rates observed by Italian population-based cancer registries were extracted from the data base of the Italian Association of Cancer Registries. Regional estimates of incidence rates for the same cancers were obtained by the MIAMOD method. Observed and estimated crude incidence rates and incidence trends were compared for the period of diagnosis 1985-2000. Eight Italian cancer registries and seven regions were selected for the analysis since they had incidence data available during the entire selected period., Results and Conclusions: An excellent agreement between estimated and observed crude incidence rates was found for all single cancer sites, regarding absolute incidence levels and time trends. A partial exception was breast, where empirical data showed a sudden increase in the last three years of observation, perhaps due to organized screenings in some Italian regions, and not captured by statistical models. Substantial underestimation of model-based incidence rates was found for all cancers combined, where the difference tended to increase with calendar year, up to a maximum of 20% in recent years. The greatest part of the discrepancy can be attributed to multiple cancers, which were included in cancer registries statistics but were not accounted for in MIAMOD estimates.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. National estimates of cancer patients survival in Italy: a model-based method.
- Author
-
Inghelmann R, Grande E, Francisci S, De Angelis R, Micheli A, Verdecchia A, Ferretti S, Vercelli M, Ramazzotti V, Pannelli F, Federico M, De Lisi V, Tumino R, Falcini F, Budroni M, Zanetti R, Paci E, Crosignani P, Zambon P, and Capocaccia R
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Age Distribution, Age Factors, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Geography, Humans, Italy epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Registries, Sex Factors, Survival Rate, Models, Statistical, Neoplasms mortality
- Abstract
Aims and Background: To provide model-based estimates of all cancers patient survival in Italy and in Italian large geographical areas (North-West, North-East, Center, South), where only partial coverage of cancer registries data is available, and to describe them in terms of time trends. Moreover, to measure the degree of representativeness of cancer patient survival obtained from Italian cancer registries data., Methods: Relative survival in the four main Italian geographical areas was estimated by a parametric mixture model belonging to the class of "cure" survival models. Data used are from Italian cancer registries, stratified by sex, period of diagnosis and age. The Italian national survival was obtained as a weighted average of these area-specific estimates, with weights proportional to the number of estimated incident cases in every area. The model takes into account also differences in survival temporal trends between the areas., Results: Relative survival for all cancers combined in Italian patients diagnosed in 1990-1994 was estimated to be higher in women (53%) than in men (38%) at 5 years from the diagnosis. The survival trend is increasing by period and decreasing by age, both for men and women. The greatest gain in terms of survival was obtained by the elderly, with annual mean growth rates in the period 1978-1994 equal to 3.5% and 3.2% for men and women, respectively. More than 50% of the youngest cancer patients were "cured", whereas for the elderly this proportion dropped to 15% and 25% for men and women, respectively. The South of Italy had the lowest survival and the North the most pronounced increase., Conclusions: The obtained national survival estimates are similar, but not identical, to previously published estimates, in which Italian registries' data were pooled without any adjustment for geographical representativeness. The four Italian areas have different survival levels and trends, showing variability within the country. The differences in survival between men and women may be explained by the different proportion of lethal cancers. Among males, most cases had a poor prognosis (lung and stomach cancers), whereas among females the largest proportion was made up of curable and less lethal cancers (breast cancer).
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Quality and completeness indices.
- Author
-
Tumino R and Ferretti S
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Death Certificates, Female, Humans, Incidence, Italy epidemiology, Male, Neoplasms, Unknown Primary epidemiology, Organ Specificity, Registries statistics & numerical data, Research Design, Survival Analysis, Neoplasms epidemiology, Quality Indicators, Health Care, Registries standards
- Abstract
In the present study, time trends of the main quality indices in the pool of the Italian Network of Cancer Registries (pool AIRT) are presented for the period 1986-1997. The percentage of cases with morphological verification increased from 75% to 83% among males and from 77% to 85% among females. Cases known only from death certificates (DCO) decreased over time in both sexes; in recent years they were about 3% of the whole case-series. Mortality incidence ratio decreased over time, from 66% to 54% among males and from 55% to 48% among females. Also cases with unknown primary site showed a decreasing time tendency. Such quality indices are also presented for specific cancer sites and for elderly subjects (75+ years). The overall trends of quality indices showed an improvement in both the activity of Cancer Registries and of the Health System.
- Published
- 2004
20. Cancer trends in Italy: figures from the cancer registries (1986-1997).
- Author
-
Crocetti E, Capocaccia R, Casella C, Ferretti S, Guzzinati S, Rosso S, Sacchettini C, Spitale A, Stracci F, and Tumino R
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Age Distribution, Aged, Female, Humans, Incidence, Italy epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Sex Distribution, Neoplasms epidemiology, Registries statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
The Italian Network of Cancer Registries analyzed incidence and mortality cancer trends during the period 1986-1997 Overall, 525,645 incident cancers and 269,902 cancer deaths (in subjects 15 years and older) were included. Age-adjusted rates, joinpoints (points in time where trend significantly changes from linearity) and estimated annual percent changes in rates (EAPC) were computed. Overall cancer incidence was significantly increasing in both sexes and cancer mortality was significantly decreasing (since 1991 among males). Incidence and mortality trends are summarised for single cancer sites. Crude rates are also showed to evaluate the effect of population ageing in terms of diagnostic and therapeutic burden for the National Health System.
- Published
- 2004
21. Incidence of AIDS-defining cancers after AIDS diagnosis among people with AIDS in Italy, 1986-1998.
- Author
-
Franceschi S, Dal Maso L, Pezzotti P, Polesel J, Braga C, Piselli P, Serraino D, Tagliabue G, Federico M, Ferretti S, De Lisi V, La Rosa F, Conti E, Budroni M, Vicario G, Piffer S, Pannelli F, Giacomin A, Bellù F, Tumino R, Fusco M, and Rezza G
- Subjects
- AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections epidemiology, Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Incidence, Italy epidemiology, Lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin epidemiology, Lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin etiology, Male, Middle Aged, Registries, Risk Factors, Sarcoma, Kaposi epidemiology, Sarcoma, Kaposi etiology, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms epidemiology, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms etiology, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome complications, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome diagnosis, Neoplasms epidemiology, Neoplasms etiology
- Abstract
A record linkage was carried out between the Italian National Registry of AIDS and 19 cancer registries. The aim was to evaluate the 1986 through 1998 trends in incidence rate (IR) of AIDS-defining cancers (ADCs) among persons with AIDS (PWA) in Italy overall and according to various characteristics. A steady decrease in IRs was found for Kaposi sarcoma (KS) in men between 1986-1992 (2.5 per 100 person-years [py]) and 1997-1998 (1.0 per 100 py). Conversely, the first decrease in IRs of KS in women (from 0.9 to 0.6 per 100 py) and of non-Hodgkin lymphoma in both genders (from 1.7 to 0.7 per 100 py) was seen between 1993-1996 and 1997-1998, thus pointing to a favorable impact of highly active antiretroviral therapies. The decline was consistent across different age and HIV transmission groups, but it was more marked in PWA with a CD4 count >50 cells/microL than in PWA with more severe immune suppression. As a proportion of AIDS cases, invasive cervical cancer increased from 1.5% in 1993-1996 to 2.4% in 1997-1998, but IRs after AIDS could not be evaluated. On account of the marked decline of KS in men in 1997-1998, the overall burden of ADCs in Italy became similar in both genders.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. An estimate of the number of people in Italy living after a childhood cancer
- Author
-
Francisci, Silvia, Guzzinati, Stefano, Dal Maso, Luigino, Sacerdote, Carlotta, Buzzoni, Carlotta, Gigli, Anna, Rugge, Massimo, Bidoli, Ettore, Bucchi, Dania, Tagliabue, Giovanna, Fusco, Mario, Falcini, Fabio, Marani, Enza, Pannozzo, Fabio, Carrozzi, Giuliano, Mangone, Lucia, Sechi, Ornelia, Michiara, Maria, Spata, Eugenia, Ferretti, Stefano, Giacomin, Adriano, Maule, Milena, Gatta, Gemma, and Capocaccia, Riccardo
- Subjects
Male ,Cancer Research ,childhood cancer ,incidence ,Italy ,prevalence ,survival ,Adolescent ,Child ,Child, Preschool ,Female ,Humans ,Infant ,Infant, Newborn ,Neoplasms ,Prevalence ,Registries ,Survival Rate ,Medicine (all) ,Oncology ,Socio-culturale ,Newborn ,Preschool - Abstract
Cancers diagnosed in children below the age of 15 years represent 1.2% of all cancer cases, and survival after a childhood cancer has greatly improved over the past 40 years in all high income countries. This study aims to estimate the number of people living in Italy after a childhood cancer for all cancers combined and for a selection of cancer types. We computed 15-year prevalence using data from 15 Italian population-based cancer registries (covering 19% of Italian population) and estimated complete prevalence for Italy by using the CHILDPREV method, implemented in the COMPREV software. A total of 44,135 persons were alive at January 1st, 2010 after a cancer diagnosed during childhood. This number corresponds to a proportion of 73 per 100,000 Italians and to about 2% of all prevalent cases. Among them, 54% were males and 64% had survived after being diagnosed before 1995, the start of the observation period. A quarter of all childhood prevalent cases were diagnosed with brain and central nervous system tumors, a quarter with acute lymphoid leukemia, and 7% with Hodgkin lymphoma. Nearly a quarter of prevalent patients were aged 40 years and older. Information about the number of people living after a childhood cancer in Italy by cancer type and their specific health care needs may be helpful to health-care planners and clinicians in the development of guidelines aimed to reduce the burden of late effect of treatments during childhood.
- Published
- 2017
23. Survival after cancer in Italian persons with AIDS, 1986-2005: A population-based estimation
- Author
-
Maso, Ld, Suligoi, B, Franceschi, S, Braga, C, Buzzoni, C, Polesel, J, Zucchetto, A, Piselli, P, Falcini, F, Caldarella, A, Zanetti, R, Vercelli, M, Guzzinati, S, Russo, A, Tagliabue, G, Iachetta, F, Ferretti, Stefano, Limina, Rm, Mangone, L, Michiara, M, Stracci, F, Pirino, Dr, Piffer, S, Giacomin, A, Vitarelli, S, Mazzoleni, G, Iannelli, A, Contrino, Ml, Fusco, M, Tumino, R, Fanetti, Ac, De Paoli, P, Decarli, A, Serraino, D, Cancer, and AIDS Registries Linkage Study32
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Population ,Aggressive lymphoma ,survival ,Young Adult ,hazard ratio ,Neoplasms ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,cancer ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Registries ,cancer survival ,education ,Sarcoma, Kaposi ,Aged ,Lymphoma, AIDS-Related ,AIDS patients ,Aged, 80 and over ,Cervical cancer ,Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome ,education.field_of_study ,Cancer prevention ,business.industry ,Lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin ,Hazard ratio ,Cancer ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,AIDS ,Survival Analysis ,Lymphoma ,Infectious Diseases ,Italy ,Female ,Skin cancer ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND Cancer survival in persons with AIDS (PWA) after introduction of antiretroviral therapies remains poorly characterized. The aim is to provide population-based estimates of cancer survival, overall and for the most important cancer types in PWA, and a comparison with persons without AIDS (non-PWA) affected by the same cancer. METHODS PWA with cancer at AIDS diagnosis or thereafter were individually matched with non-PWA by type of cancer, sex, age, year of diagnosis, area of living, and, for lymphomas, histological subtype. Five-year observed survival and hazard ratios (HRs) of death in PWA versus non-PWA with 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were estimated. RESULTS We included 2262 Italian PWA and 4602 non-PWA with cancer diagnosed during 1986-2005. Between 1986 and 1995, and 1996 and 2005, 5-year survival for all cancers in PWA improved from 12% to 41% and the corresponding HR versus non-PWA decreased from 5.1 (95% CI: 4.3 to 6.1) to 2.9 (95% CI: 2.6 to 3.3). During 1996-2005, HRs were 2.0 (95% CI: 1.4 to 2.9) for Kaposi sarcoma, 3.4 (95% CI: 2.9 to 4.1) for non-Hodgkin lymphoma, and 2.4 (95% CI: 1.4 to 4.0) for cervical cancer. HRs were 2.5 (95% CI: 2.1 to 3.1) for all non-AIDS-defining cancers, 5.9 (95% CI: 3.1 to 11.2) for Hodgkin lymphoma, and 7.3 (95% CI: 2.8 to 19.2) for nonmelanoma skin cancer. A ≤3-fold survival difference was found for cancers of the stomach, liver, anus, lung, brain, and the most aggressive lymphoma subtypes. CONCLUSIONS The persisting, although narrowing, gap in cancer survival between PWA and non-PWA indicates the necessity of enhancing therapeutic approaches, so that PWA can be provided the same chances of survival observed in the general population, and improving cancer prevention and screening.
- Published
- 2014
24. Italian cancer figures, report 2011: Survival of cancer patients in Italy
- Author
-
Airtum, Working Group, Fusco, Mario, Buzzoni, Carlotta, Coviello, Enzo, Rashid, Ivan, Bianconi, Fortunato, Cuccaro, Francesco, Castaing, Marine, Angelis, Roberta, Giacomin, Adriano, Guzzinati, Stefano, Mosso, Maria Luisa, Pisani, Paola, Quaglia, Alberto, Randi, Giorgia, Ramazzotti, Valerio, Russo, Antonio, Senatore, Gennaro, Stracci, Fabrizio, Traina, Adele, Vercelli, Marina, Zarcone, Maurizio, Ferretti, Stefano, Mazzoleni, Guido, Bellu, Francesco, Tschugguel, Birgit, Valiere, Elena, Facchinelli, Gerlinde, Falk, Markus, Dal Cappello, Tomas, Vercellino, Pier Carlo, Andreone, Simona, Busato, Anna, Marzola, Laura, Migliari, Elena, Carletti, Nada, Nenci, Italo, Crocetti, Emanuele, Caldarella, Adele, Corbinelli, Antonella, Giusti, Francesco, Intrieri, Teresa, Manneschi, Gianfranco, Nemcova, Libuse, Romeo, Gianpaolo, Sacchettini, Claudio, Zappa, Marco, Paci, Eugenio, Serraino, Diego, Angelin, Tiziana, Bidoli, Ettore, Dal Maso, Luigino, Dottori, Margherita, Paoli, Angela, Santis, Emilia, Forgiarini, Ornella, Lise, Mauro, Zucchetto, Antonella, Zanier, Loris, Orengo, Maria Antonietta, Casella, Claudia, Marani, Enza, Puppo, Antonella, Celesia, Maria Vittoria, Cogno, Roberta, Manenti, Simone, Garrone, Elsa, Pannozzo, Fabio, Busco, Susanna, Maria Cecilia Cercato, Battisti, Walter, Sperduti, Isabella, Macci, Leonarda, Bugliarello, Ester, Bernazza, Edvige, Tamburo, Lucilla, Rossi, Miriana, Curatella, Simonetta, Francesco, Carla, Tamburrino, Silvana, Bisanti, Luigi, Autelitano, Mariangela, Ghilardi, Simona, Leone, Rosanna, Filipazzi, Luisa, Bonini, Annamaria, Giubelli, Cinzia, Federico, Massimo, Artioli, Maria Elisa, Valla, Katia, Braghiroli, Barbara, Cirilli, Claudia, Luminari, Stefano, Pirani, Monica, Ferrari, Lorenza, Bellatalla, Caterina, Fusco, Maria, Panico, Margherita, Perrotta, Carmela, Vassante, Biagio, Vitale, Maria Francesca, Michiara, Maria, Bozzani, Francesco, Sgargi, Paolo, Tumino, Rosario, La Rosa, Maria Guglielmina, Cascone, Giuseppe, Frasca, Graziella, Giurdanella, Maria Concetta, Martorana, Caterina, Morana, Gabriele, Nicita, Carmela, Rollo, Patrizia Concetta, Ruggeri, Maria Grazia, Sigona, Aurora, Spata, Eugenia, Vacirca, Stefania, Mangone, Lucia, Di Felice, Enza, Pezzarossi, Annamaria, Caroli, Stefania, Pellegri, Carlotta, Vicentini, Massimo, Storchi, Cinzia, Cavuto, Silvio, Costa, Jaqueline, Falcini, Fabio, Colamartini, Americo, Bucchi, Lauro, Balducci, Chiara, Ravegnani, Mila, Vitali, Benedetta, Cordaro, Carlo, Caprara, Licia, Giuliani, Orietta, Giorgetti, Stefania, Salvatore, Silvia, Palumbo, Monica, Vattiato, Rosa, Ravaioli, Alessandra, Foca, Flavia, Rinaldi, Elisa, Mancini, Silvia, Tonelli, Chiara, Amadori, Marinella, Cremone, Luigi, Iannelli, Arturo, Zevola, Arrigo, Budroni, Mario, Cesaraccio, Rosaria, Pirino, Daniela, Carboni, Donatella, Fiori, Giovanna, Soddu, Marcella, Mameli, Gianpaolo, Mura, Francesco, Contrino, Maria Lia, Madeddu, Anselmo, Tisano, Francesco, Sciacca, Salvatore, Muni, Angela, Mizzi, Margherita, Russo, Maria, Sacco, Giorgio, Aletta, Paoletta, Colanino Ziino, Antonio, Tessandori, Roberto, Fanetti, Anna Clara, Maspero, Sergio, Annulli, Monica Lucia, Moroni, Elena, Sanoja Gonzalez, Maria Eugenia, Zanetti, Roberto, Rosso, Stefano, Patriarca, Silvia, Prandi, Rossana, Sobrato, Irene, Gilardi, Franca, Busso, Paola, Piffer, Silvano, Gentilini, Maria A., Battisti, Laura, Rizzello, Roberto, Cappelletti, Maddalena, Moser, Marilena, La Rosa, Francesco, D Alo, Daniela, Scheibel, Massimo, Costarelli, Daniela, Spano, Francesco, Rossini, Stefania, Santucci, Cinzia, Petrinelli, Anna Maria, Solimene, Clotilde, Brunori, Valerio, Crosignani, Paolo, Tagliabue, Giovanna, Contiero, Paolo, Preto, Lucia, Tittarelli, Andrea, Maghini, Anna, Codazzi, Tiziana, Frassoldi, Emanuela, Gada, Daniela, Costa, Enrica, Di Grazia, Laura, Zambon, Paola, Baracco, Maddalena, Bovo, Emanuela, Dal Cin, Antonella, Fiore, Anna Rita, Greco, Alessandra, Monetti, Daniele, Rosano, Alberto, Stocco, Carmen, Tognazzo, Sandro, Donato, Francesco, Limina, Rosa Maria, Adorni, Anna, Andreis, Paolo, Zani, Giuseppe, Piovani, Francesco, Salvi, Ornella, Puleio, Maria, Vitarelli, Susanna, Antonini, Silvia, Candela, Giuseppina, Pappalardo, Giuseppe, Scuderi, Tiziana, Lottero, Barbara, Ribaudo, Michele, Ricci, Paolo, Guarda, Linda, Gatti, Luciana, Bozzeda, Annalaura, Dall Acqua, Maria, Pironi, Vanda, Sutera Sardo, Antonella, Mazzei, Adriana, Sirianni, Nicola, Lavecchia, Anna Maria, Mancuso, Pierina, Usala, Mario, Pala, Filomena, Sini, Giovanna Maria, Pintori, Nicolina, Canu, Luisa, Demurtas, Giuliana, Doa, Nina, Ponz Leon, Maurizio, Domati, Federica, Rossi, Giuseppina, Goldoni, Carlo Alberto, Rossi, Federica, Gaetani, Carmela, Benatti, Piero, Roncucci, Luca, Di Gregorio, Carmela, Pedroni, Monica, Pezzi, Annalisa, Maffei, Stefania, Mariani, Francesco, Borsi, Enrica, Carruba, Giuseppe, Cusimano, Rosanna, Amodio, Rosalba, Dolcemascolo, Cecilia, Staiti, Rosalba, Pastore, Guido, Magnani, Corrado, Terracini, Benedetto, Cena, Tiziana, Alessi, Daniela, Baussano, Iacopo, Merletti, Franco, Maule, Milena, Macerata, Vanda, Cocchioni, Mario, Pascucci, Cristiana, Gennaro, Valerio, Lazzarotto, Anna, Benfatto, Lucia, Mazzucco, Giovanna, Montanaro, Fabio, AIRTUM Working Group: [.., Enrica Borsi, and ]
- Subjects
Adult ,Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Adolescent ,Age Factors ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Middle Aged ,Survival Analysis ,CANCER ,Survival Rate ,Young Adult ,Italy ,Organ Specificity ,Child, Preschool ,Neoplasms ,Humans ,Female ,Registries ,Child ,Aged - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: population-based survival analyses are fundamental to assess the impact of public health interventions and new therapies in cancer control. This monograph updates previous reports on cancer patient survival in Italy up to the year 2007. MATERIAL AND METHODS: we extracted from the Network of Italian Cancer Registries (AIRTUM) database over 1,490,000 records of tumours diagnosed during 1990-2007 and followed up to the end of 2008, including all multiple tumours. We used the Ederer II method to estimate relative survival (RS) for 29 different types of neoplasm. Five-year relative survival rates were analysed by gender and macroarea. Trends in 5-, 10- and 15-year RS were studied by gender over six 3-year diagnostic periods, from 1990 to 2007. Conditional 5-year RS was also computed by gender and macroarea. Hybrid approaches were applied to exploit the recent survival experiences of cases diagnosed up to 2007. Adjustment for age was performed using EUROCARE weights. Additional sections describe cancer patient survival in childhood and in elderly patients and provide a comparison of cancer patient survival rates in Italy with those of other countries. RESULTS: Standardized 5-year RS for all tumours but skin in 52% for men and 61% for women. Patient survival has improved for almost all types of cancer: from 1990 to 2007 5-year RS has increased by 15% for all cancers but skin; the exceptions are some cancers with poor prognosis, where patient survival has remained basically unchanged. In males, RS was usually lower than in females, but trend analysis shows that the gap is narrowing. We also report persisting lower RS in southern Italy: 5-year RS in the South is usually from 4% to 10% lower than in the North and Centre. CONCLUSION: this study provides valuable information for all stakeholders in cancer control, both in Italy and elsewhere. Increasing survival reflects improvements in various areas of cancer control. On the other hand, delayed diagnosis and suboptimal management are consistent with the reported differences in survival within the country.
- Published
- 2011
25. [New incidence and mortality data. 2003-2005]
- Author
-
Airtum, Working Group, Crocetti, Emanuele, Buzzoni, Carlotta, Serraino, Diego, Vicario, Gianni, Angelin, Tiziana, Bessega, Giuseppina, Bidoli, Ettore, Brunetti, Davide, Dottori, Margherita, Forgiarini, Ornella, French, Susan, Stanta, Giorgio, Zaina, Lucia, Zanier, Loris, Zambon, Paola, Baracco, Maddalena, Bovo, Emanuela, Dal Cin, Antonella, Fiore, Anna Rita, Greco, Alessandra, Guzzinati, Stefano, Monetti, Daniele, Rosano, Alberto, Stocco, Carmen Fiorella, Tognazzo, Sandro, Egarter-Vigl, Eduard, Bello, Francesco, Vittadello, Fabio, Bulatko, Andreas, Luthy, Monika, Facchinelli, Gerlinde, Valiere, Elena, Tschugguel, Birgit, Dorfmann, Hubert, Giacomin, Adriano, Vercellino, Pier Carlo, Andreone, Simona, Ferretti, Stefano, Marzola, Laura, Migliari, Elena, Carletti, Nada, Nenci, Italo, Vitarelli, Susanna, Antonini, Silvia, Federico, Massimo, Artioli, Maria Elisa, Cirilli, Claudia, Fracca, Antonella, Rashid, Ivan, Valla, Katia, Lisi, Vincenzo, Sgargi, Paolo, Bozzani, Francesco, Donato, Andrea, Iannelli, Arturo, Mari, Carmine, Senatore, Gennaro, Zevola, Arrigo, Abbamonte, Benedetto, Alfano, Ida An, Annunziato, Loredana, Barone, Savino, Ferrante, Assunta, Budroni, Mario, Cesaraccio, Rosaria, Pirino, Daniela, Sechi, Ornelia, Piras, Daniela, Sechi, Amelia, Oggiano, Massimiliano, Piffer, Silvano, Franchini, Silva, Gentilini, Maria A., Battisti, Laura, Cappelletti, Maddalena, Falcini, Fabio, Amadori, Dino, Balducci, Chiara, Benericetti, Elisa, Bucchi, Lauro, Caprara, Licia, Colamartini, Americo, Cordaro, Carlo, Desiderio, Franco, Fabbri, Carla, Foca, Flavia, Giorgetti, Stefania, Montanari, Emanuela, Naldi, Stefania, Nannini, Roberto, Ravaioli, Alessandra, Ravegnani, Mila, Rinaldi, Elisa, Salvatore, Silvia, Serafini, Monica, Vattiato, Rosa, Vitali, Benedetta, Pannozzo, Fabio, Busco, Susanna, Natali, Maurilio, Valerio Ramazzotti, Macci, Leonarda, Bugliarello, Ester, Bernazza, Edvige, Tamburo, Lucilla, Rossi, Miriana, Curatella, Simonetta, Sperduti, Isabella, Fusco, Mario, Bellatalla, Caterina, Fusco, Maria, Panico, Margherita, Perrotta, Carmela, Vassante, Biagio, Crosignani, Paolo, Tagliabue, Giovanna, Contiero, Paolo, Fabiano, Sabrina, Maghini, Anna, Tittarelli, Andrea, Codazzi, Tiziana, Frassoldi, Emanuela, Costa, Enrica, Nobile, Silvia, Vigano, Clotilde, Berrino, Franco, Mangone, Lucia, Pezzarossi, Annamaria, Pellegri, Carlotta, Caroli, Stefania, Valentini, Massimo, Cavuto, Silvio, Felice, Enza, Vercelli, Marina, Orengo, Maria Antonietta, Casella, Claudia, Marani, Enza, Puppo, Antonella, Celesia, Maria Vittoria, Cogno, Roberta, Grondona, Anna Maria, Giachero, Giovanna, Manenti, Simone, Quaglia, Alberto, Garrone, Elsa, Paci, Eugenio, Caldarella, Adele, Corbinelli, Antonella, Dainelli, Giulia, Guadagni, Marzia, Intrieri, Teresa, Manneschi, Gianfranco, Miccinesi, Guido, Nemcova, Libuse, Sacchettini, Claudio, Giusti, Francesco, La Rosa, Francesco, Stracci, Fabrizio, Petrinelli, Anna Maria, Costarelli, Daniela, Cassetti, Tiziana, Scheibel, Massimo, Romagnoli, Carlo, Mastrandrea, Vito, Zanetti, Roberto, Rosso, Stefano, Patriarca, Silvia, Vicari, Piera, Sobrato, Irene, Gilardi, Franca, Maglietta, Giusy, Gallesio, Luisa, Tumino, Rosario, Cilia, Sonia, La Rosa, Maria Guglielmina, Cascone, Giuseppe, Cianciolo, Giuseppe, Frasca, Graziella, Giurdanella, Maria Concetta, Martorana, Caterina, Morana, Gabriele, Nicita, Carmela, Rollo, Patrizia, Ruggeri, Maria Grazia, Sigona, Aurora, Spata, Eugenia, Vacirca, Stefania, Bisanti, Luigi, Autelitano, Mariangela, Ghilardi, Simona, Bovini, Annamaria, Giubelli, Cinzia, Tessandori, Roberto, Ardemagni, Giuseppina, Traina, Adele, Candela, Pina, Contrino, Maria Lia, Tisano, Francesco, Madeddu, Anselmo, Ponz Leon, Maurizio, Di Gregorio, Carmela, Roncucci, Luca, Benfatti, Piero, Losi, Lorena, Ponti, Giovanni, Pedroni, Monica, Rossi, Giuseppina, Roncari, Barbara, Maffei, Stefania, Menigatti, Mirco, Rossi, Federica, Pecone, Luana, Domati, Federica, Pastore, Guido, Magnani, Corrado, Terracini, Benedetto, Alessi, Daniela, Dal Masso, Paola, Dama, Elisa, Macerata, Vanda, Maule, Milena, Mosso, Maria Luisa, Nonnato, Marinella, Zuccolo, Luisa, Merletti, Franco, Pannelli, Franco, Pascucci, Cristiana, Gennaro, Valerio, Benfatto, Lucia, Bianchelli, Monica, Lazzarotto, Anna, and Viarengo, Paolo
- Subjects
Male ,colorectal tumors ,Italy ,Incidence ,Neoplasms ,mortality ,incidence ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Female - Abstract
This is an update of incidence and mortality cancer data provided by the Italian Network of Cancer Registry (AIRTUM) relative to the period 2003-2005.AIRTUM is a network of general and specialized population-based cancer registries that covers about 1/3 of the Italian resident population (www.registri-tumori.it). Incidence and mortality data for the period 2003-2005 are based on 20 Registries. The five most frequently diagnosed cancers were: - prostate (18.5%), non melanoma skin (15.8%), lung (13.1%), colorectal (12.0%), bladder (5.7%) among males; - breast (24.9%), non melanoma skin (15.1%), colorectal (11.9%), lung (5.0%) and stomach (4.1%) among females. In the same period the most frequent causes of cancer death were: - cancer of the lung (27.6%), colorectal (10.7%), prostate (8.5%), stomach (7.3%) and liver (6.1%) among males; - breast cancer (16.3%), colorectal (11.9%), lung (10.3%), stomach (7.2%) and pancreas (6.5%) among females. According to the age-specific incidence rates one man and one woman every two will receive a cancer diagnosis during his/hers life (from birth to the age of 84 years). From 1993-1995 to 2003-2005, overall crude cancer incidence rate (males and females together) increased from 555.4 to 654.8 x 100,000. Standardization showed that 63% of this increase was due to ageing of the population. Moreover, most of the residual increase was among those cancer sites (breast, prostate, colorectal, thyroid and melanoma) for which early detection may have played a relevant role in anticipating (and therefore increasing) the number of diagnoses. Due to population ageing also overall cancer mortality did not show any decrease when crude rates were compared. On the contrary, standardized mortality rates (all cancers together) showed a strong decrease (311.4 vs. 266.5 x 100.000). The risk of receiving a diagnosis or dying because of cancer is still lower in residents in the regions of the South of Italy than in those of Central and Northern Italy, but they are becoming more and more similar. In Italy cancer incidence and mortality rates are similar to those in northern European countries and in USA among males, but they are still lower for women.
- Published
- 2009
26. Italian cancer figures, report 2013: Multiple tumours
- Author
-
Airtum, Working Group, Adamo, Maria Stella, Alessi, Daniela, Aletta, Paoletta, Amodio, Rosalba, Andreone, Simona, Angelin, Tiziana, Anghinoni, Emanuela, Annulli, Monica Lucia, Antonini, Silvia, Artioli, Maria Elisa, Autelitano, Mariangela, Balducci, Chiara, Balottari, Paola, Baracco, Maddalena, Battisti, Walter, Bella, Francesca, Bellatalla, Caterina, Belluardo, Cristiano, Benatti, Piero, Benedetto, Giovanni, Benfatto, Lucia, Bernazza, Edvige, Bianconi, Fortunato, Biavati, Patrizia, Bidoli, Ettore, Birri, Silvia, Bizzoco, Sabrina, Bonelli, Luigina, Bonini, Annamaria, Borciani, Elisabetta, Bovo, Emanuela, Bozzani, Francesco, Bozzeda, Annalaura, Braghiroli, Barbara, Brucculeri, Maria Angela, Brunori, Valerio, Bucalo, Giovanni, Bucchi, Lauro, Bugliarello, Ester, Bulatko, Andreas, Busco, Susanna, Busso, Paola, Buzzoni, Carlotta, Calabretta, Laura, Caldarella, Adele, Candela, Giuseppina, Canu, Luisa, Cappelletti, Maddalena, Caprara, Licia, Carboni, Donatella, Carletti, Nada, Caroli, Stefania, Carone, Simona, Cascio, Maria Antonietta, Cascone, Giuseppe, Casella, Claudia, Castaing, Marine, Cecconami, Lorella, Celesia, Maria Vittoria, Cena, Tiziana, Cercato, Maria Cecilia, Cesaraccio, Rosaria, Chiesa, Roberta, Cirilli, Claudia, Civaschi, Alessandro, Cocchioni, Mario, Codazzi, Tiziana, Cogno, Roberta, Colamartini, Americo, Colanino Ziino, Antonino, Cometti, Ivan, Contiero, Paolo, Contrino, Maria Lia, Corbinelli, Antonella, Cordaro, Carlo, Corti, Mariangela, Costa, Alessandro, Costarelli, Daniela, Cremone, Luigi, Crocetti, Emanuele, Curatella, Simonetta, Cusimano, Rosanna, D Alo, Daniela, D Angelo, Stefania, Dal Cappello, Tomas, Dal Cin, Antonella, Dal Maso, Luigino, Dall Acqua, Maria, Dalsasso, Fernanda, Davini, Chiara, Dottori, Margherita, Maria, Valentina, Santis, Emilia, Valiere, Elena, Dei Tos, Angelo Paolo, Demurtas, Giuliana, Devigli, Elena, Di Felice, Enza, Di Grazia, Laura, Di Gregorio, Carmela, Di Prima, Alessia, Distefano, Rosalba, Doa, Nina, Domati, Federica, Fabiano, Sabrina, Facchinelli, Gerlinde, Falcini, Fabio, Falk, Markus, Fanetti, Anna Clara, Fattoruso, Silvia, Federico, Massimo, Ferrari, Lorenza, Ferretti, Stefano, Fidelbo, Melchiorre, Filipazzi, Luisa, Fiore, Anna Rita, Fiori, Giovanna, Foca, Flavia, Forgiarini, Ornella, Frasca, Graziella, Frassoldi, Emanuela, Frizza, Jacqueline, Fusco, Maria, Fusco, Mario, Gada, Daniela, Garrone, Elsa, Gasparotti, Cinzia, Gatti, Luciana, Gaudiano, Claudia, Gennaro, Valerio, Gentilini, Maria, Gerevini, Claudia, Ghilardi, Simona, Ghisleni, Silvia, Giacomin, Adriano, Giavazzi, Luisa, Gilardi, Franca, Giorgetti, Stefania, Giubelli, Cinzia, Giuliani, Orietta, Giurdanella, Maria Concetta, Gola, Gemma, Goldoni, Carlo Alberto, Golizia, Maria Grazia, Grandi, Luigi, Greco, Alessandra, Guarda, Linda, Guttadauro, Agnese, Guzzinati, Stefano, Iachetta, Francesco, Iannelli, Arturo, Ieni, Antonio, Intrieri, Teresa, Kaleci, Shaniko, La Rosa, Francesco, Lando, Cecilia, Lavecchia, Anna Maria, Lazzarato, Fulvio, Leone, Anna, Leone, Rosanna, Lonati, Fulvio, Lottero, Barbara, Lucchi, Silvia, Luminari, Stefano, Macci, Leonarda, Macerata, Vanda, Madeddu, Anselmo, Maffei, Stefania, Maghini, Anna, Magnani, Corrado, Magnani, Giulia, Magoni, Michele, Mameli, Gianpaolo, Mancini, Silvia, Mancuso, Pierina, Mangone, Lucia, Manneschi, Gianfranco, Mannino, Rita, Mannino, Salvatore, Marani, Enza, Mariani, Francesco, Martorana, Caterina, Marzola, Laura, Maspero, Sergio, Maule, Milena, Mazzei, Adriana, Mazzoleni, Guido, Mazzucco, Giovanna, Melcarne, Anna, Merletti, Franco, Michiara, Maria, Migliari, Elena, Minerba, Sante, Minicuzzi, Antonia, Mizzi, Margherita, Monetti, Daniele, Morana, Gabriele, Moroni, Elena, Mosso, Maria Luisa, Muni, Angela, Mura, Francesco, Natali, Maurilio, Nemcova, Libuse, Nicita, Carmela, Ocello, Cristina, Paci, Eugenio, Pala, Filomena, Palumbo, Monica, Panico, Margherita, Pannozzo, Fabio, Pascucci, Cristiana, Pastore, Guido, Patriarca, Silvia, Pedroni, Monica, Pellegri, Carlotta, Perrotta, Carmela, Pesce, Paola, Petrinelli, Anna Maria, Petrucci, Chiara, Pezzarossi, Annamaria, Piffer, Silvano, Pintori, Nicolina, Pirani, Monica, Pirino, Daniela, Pironi, Vanda, Ponz Leon, Maurizio, Prandi, Rossana, Prazzoli, Rita, Preto, Lucia, Puleio, Maria, Puppo, Antonella, Quaglia, Alberto, Quarta, Fabrizio, Quattrocchi, Maria, Raho, Anna Maria, Valerio Ramazzotti, Rashid, Ivan, Ravaioli, Alessandra, Ravazzolo, Barbara, Ravegnani, Mila, Reggiani-Bonetti, Luca, Ribaudo, Michele, Rinaldi, Elisa, Ricci, Paolo, Rizzello, Roberto, Rollo, Patrizia Concetta, Roncucci, Luca, Rosano, Alberto, Rossi, Federica, Rossi, Giuseppina, Rossi, Miriana, Rossini, Stefania, Rosso, Stefano, Rudisi, Giuseppa, Ruggeri, Maria Grazia, Russo, Antonio Giampiero, Russo, Maria, Sacchettini, Claudio, Sacco, Giorgio, Sacerdote, Carlotta, Salvatore, Silvia, Salvi, Ornella, Sampietro, Giuseppe, Sandrini, Monica, Santucci, Cinzia, Scheibel, Massimo, Schiacchitano, Salvatore, Sciacca, Salvatore, Sciacchitano, Carlo, Scuderi, Tiziana, Sechi, Ornelia, Seghini, Pietro, Senatore, Gennaro, Serafini, Giuseppina, Serraino, Diego, Sgargi, Paolo, Sigona, Aurora, Sini, Giovanna Maria, Sobrato, Irene, Soddu, Marcella, Solimene, Clotilde, Spano, Francesco, Spata, Eugenia, Sperduti, Isabella, Staiti, Rosalba, Stocco, Carmen, Stracci, Fabrizio, Sunseri, Raffaella, Sardo, Antonella Sutera, Tagliabue, Giovanna, Tamburo, Lucilla, Tamburrino, Silvana, Tanzarella, Margherita, Terracini, Benedetto, Tessandori, Roberto, Tisano, Francesco, Tittarelli, Andrea, Tognazzo, Sandro, Torrisi, Antonietta, Torrisi, Antonina, Traina, Adele, Trapani, Carlo, Tschugguel, Birgit, Tumino, Rosario, Usala, Mario, Vacirca, Stefania, Valerio, Orsola, Valla, Katia, Varvara, Massimo, Vasquez, Enrico, Vassante, Biagio, Vattiato, Rosa, Vercelli, Marina, Vercellino, Pier Carlo, Vicentini, Massimo, Villa, Marco, Vitale, Francesco, Vitale, Maria Francesca, Vitali, Benedetta, Vitarelli, Susanna, Zanchi, Andreina, Zanetti, Roberto, Zani, Giuseppe, Zanier, Loris, Zappa, Marco, Zarcone, Maurizio, Zevola, Arrigo, Zucchetto, Antonella, Zucchi, Alberto, Buzzoni, C, Crocetti, E, Bella, F, Bonelli, L, Caldarella, A, Castaing, M, Cercato, MC, Dal Maso, L, Dei Tos, AP, Ferretti, S, Giacomin, A, Pannozzo, F, Mazzoleni, G, Patriarca, S, Petrucci, S, Pisani, P, Ponz de Leon, P, Quaglia, A, Ramazzotti, V, Tumino, R, Vercelli, M, and Vitale, F
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Data Interpretation ,cancer incidence ,Adolescent ,Epidemiology ,Settore MED/42 - Igiene Generale E Applicata ,Neoplasms, Multiple Primary ,Cohort Studies ,Young Adult ,Multiple Primary ,Risk Factors ,Neoplasms ,80 and over ,Humans ,Child ,Preschool ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,Incidence ,Environmental and Occupational Health ,multiple tumour ,Infant ,Neoplasms, Second Primary ,italian cancer ,multiple tumours ,Statistical ,Middle Aged ,Multiple primary cancer incidence ,Child, Preschool ,Data Interpretation, Statistical ,Female ,Italy ,Second Primary ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Public Health - Abstract
This collaborative study, based on data collected by the network of Italian association of cancer registries (AIRTUM), provides updated estimates on the incidence risk of multiple primary cancer (MP). The objective is to highlight and quantify the bidirectional associations between different oncological diseases. The quantification of the excess or decreased risk of further cancers in cancer patients, in comparison with the general population, may contribute to understand the aetiology of cancer and to address clinical follow-up.Data herein presented were provided by AIRTUM population-based cancer registries, which cover nowadays 48% of the Italian population. This monograph utilizes the AIRTUM database (December 2012), considering all malignant cancer cases diagnosed between 1976 and 2010. All cases are coded according to ICD-O-3. Non-melanoma skin cancer cases, cases based on death certificate only, cases based on autopsy only, and cases with follow-up time equal to zero were excluded. To define multiple primaries, IARC-IACR rules were adopted (http://www.iacr.com.fr/MPrules_july2004.pdf). Data were subjected to standard quality control procedures (described in the AIRTUM data management protocol) and specific quality control checks defined for the present study. A cohort of cancer patients was followed over time from first cancer diagnosis until the date of second cancer diagnosis, death, or the end of follow-up, to evaluate whether the number of observed second cancer cases was greater than expected. Person years at risk (PY) were computed by first cancer site, geographic area (North, Centre, South and Islands), attained age, and attained calendar-year group. All second cancers diagnosed in the cohort's patients were included in the observed numbers of cases. The expected number of cancer cases was computed multiplying the accumulated PY by the expected rates, calculated from the AIRTUM database stratified by cancer site, geographic area, age, and calendar-year group. The Standardized Incidence Ratio (SIR) was calculated as the ratio of observed to expected cancer cases. The Excess Absolute Risk (EAR) beyond the expected amount were calculated subtracting the expected number of subsequent cancers from the observed number of cancer cases; the difference was then divided by the PY and the number of cancer cases in excess (or deficit) was expressed per 1,000 PY. Confidence intervals were stated at 95%. The two months (60 days) after first cancer diagnosis were defined as "synchronicity period", and in the main analysis observed and expected cases during this period were excluded. It was estimated the excess risk in the period after first diagnosis (≥ 0 months), excluding the synchronicity period (≥ 2 months), and during the following periods: 2-11, 12-59, 60-119 and 120 months after diagnosis. First-cancer-site-and-gender-specific sheets are presented, reporting both SIRs and EARs.For 5,979,338 person-years a cohort of 1,635,060 cancer patients (880,361 males and 754,699 females) diagnosed between 1976 and 2010 was followed. The mean follow-up length was 14 years. Overall, 85,399 metachronous (latency ≥2 months) cancers were observed, while 77,813 were expected during the study period: SIR: 1.10 (95%CI 1.09-1.10), EAR: 1.32 x 1,000 person-years (95%CI 1.19 - 1.46). The SIR was 1.08 (95%CI 1.08-1.09) for men (54,518 observed and 50,260 expected) and 1.12 (95%CI 1.11-1.13) for women (30,881/27,553), and the EAR 1.61 (95%CI 1.37-1.84) and 1.08 x 1,000 person-years (95%CI 0.93-1.24), respectively.Moreover, during the first two months after first cancer diagnosis (synchronous period) 14,807 cancers were observed while 3,536 were expected (SIR: 4.16; 95%CI 4.09-4.22); the SIR was 4.08 (95%CI 4.00-4.16) for men and 4.32 (95%CI 4.20-4.45) for women.The mean age of patients at first cancer diagnosis was 67.0 years among males and 65.8 among females.The risk of MP was related to age being higher for younger patients and lower for older ones. In relation to the time of first cancer diagnosis, the SIR was very high at the beginning and then decreased, although remaining constantly over 1, and then rose over time. No strong differences were evident across the different incidence periods, which all showed an increased MP risk.Women had higher SIRs than expected for 18 cancer sites, men for 12. The statistically significantly SIRs lower than 1 were 2 and 8, respectively. Increased overall MP risk was observed for patients of both sexes with a first primary in the oral cavity (SIR men: 1.93; SIR women: 1.48), pharynx (SIR men: 2.13; SIR women: 1.99), larynx (SIR men: 1.57; SIR women: 1.79), oesophagus (SIR men: 1.45; SIR women: 1.41), lung (SIR men: 1.09; SIR women: 1.13), kidney (SIR men: 1.14; SIR women: 1.15), urinary bladder (SIR men: 1.29; SIR women: 1.22), thyroid (SIR: 1.22 in both sexes), Hodgkin lymphoma (SIR men: 1.59; SIR women: 1.94), and non-Hodgkin lymphoma (SIR men: 1.13; SIR women: 1.12), and for the heterogeneous group "other sites" (SIR men: 1.09; SIR women: 1.07). Moreover, men had a higher MP risk if the first cancer was in the testis (SIR: 1.24), while the same was true for women with gallbladder (SIR: 1.21), skin melanoma (SIR: 1.17), bone (SIR: 1.41), breast (SIR: 1.12), cervix uteri (SIR: 1.23) and corpus uteri (SIR: 1.23), and ovarian cancer (SIR: 1.18). On the contrary, a first liver or pancreas cancer were associated with a decreased MP risk in both sexes (liver SIR: 0.86 and 0.81 for men and women, respectively; pancreas SIR: 0.70 and 0.78 for men and women, respectively), as were those of colon (SIR: 0.93), rectum (SIR: 0.83), gallbladder (SIR: 0.80), prostate (SIR: 0.93), mesothelioma (SIR: 0.65), and central nervous system (SIR: 0.82) among men. Among the cancers for which the EAR is statistically significant, those with higher Excess Absolute Risk of MP were those of the oral cavity (EAR: 16.0 x 1,000 person-years in men and 5.4 in women), pharynx (17.6 and 9.1), larynx (11.4 and 8.8), and oesophagus (8.5 and 4.8).This descriptive study provides quantitative information on the risk of developing a second cancer in an Italian population-based cohort of approximately 1.65 million cancer patients, compared to the risk of the general population. During the follow-up time (on average 14 years) cancer patients had an MP risk that was 10% higher in comparison to the general population and an Excess Absolute Risk of 1.32 x 1,000 person-years. Study of MPs and their risk measures are dependent on methods used in the calculation. The definition of MP is not univocal and using different rules can greatly change the number of cancers in a patient with MPs. However, the AIRTUM cancer registries adopt the same recommendations for MP definition. This monograph was therefore made possible by the shared rules and standards used by AIRTUM registries. The cancer site-specific sheets, which represent the core of the monograph, can be useful to highlight and quantify the bidirectional associations among different diseases and therefore provide indications for clinical follow-up. Lifestyle changes in more healthful directions can have a positive effect in the cancer patient population and should always be recommended.
27. [Italian cancer figures, report 2010: Cancer prevalence in Italy. Patients living with cancer, long-term survivors and cured patients]
- Author
-
Airtum, Working Group, Guzzinati, Stefano, Dal Maso, Luigino, Angelis, Roberta, Paoli, Angela, Buzzoni, Carlotta, Crocetti, Emanuele, Bucchi, Lauro, Casella, Claudia, Cuccaro, Francesco, Fusco, Mario, Luminari, Stefano, Madeddu, Anselmo, Mangone, Lucia, Patriarca, Silvia, Piffer, Silvano, Stracci, Fabrizio, Tagliabue, Giovanna, Tumino, Rosario, Zappa, Marco, Capocaccia, Riccardo, Ferretti, Stefano, Mazzoleni, Guido, Bellu, Francesco, Tschugguel, Birgit, Valiere, Elena, Facchinelli, Gerlinde, Falk, Markus, Dal Cappello, Tomas, Giacomin, Adriano, Vercellino, Pier Carlo, Andreone, Simona, Busato, Anna, Marzola, Laura, Migliari, Elena, Carletti, Nada, Nenci, Italo, Caldarella, Adele, Corbinelli, Antonella, Giusti, Francesco, Intrieri, Teresa, Manneschi, Gianfranco, Nemcova, Libuse, Romeo, Gianpaolo, Sacchettini, Claudio, Paci, Eugenio, Serraino, Diego, Angelin, Tiziana, Bidoli, Ettore, Dottori, Margherita, Santis, Emilia, Forgiarini, Ornella, Zucchetto, Antonella, Zanier, Loris, Vercelli, Marina, Orengo, Maria Antonietta, Marani, Enza, Puppo, Antonella, Celesia, Maria Vittoria, Cogno, Roberta, Manenti, Simone, Garrone, Elsa, Quaglia, Alberto, Pannozzo, Fabio, Busco, Susanna, Rashid, Ivan, Ramazzotti, Valerio, Cercato, M. Cecilia, Battisti, Walter, Sperduti, Isabella, Macci, Leonarda, Bugliarello, Ester, Bernazza, Edvige, Tamburo, Lucilla, Rossi, Miriana, Curatella, Simonetta, Francesco, Carla, Tamburrino, Silvana, Bisanti, Luigi, Autelitano, Mariangela, Randi, Giorgia, Ghilardi, Simona, Leone, Rosanna, Filipazzi, Luisa, Bonini, Annamaria, Giubelli, Cinzia, Federico, Massimo, Artioli, Maria Elisa, Valla, Katia, Braghiroli, Barbara, Cirilli, Claudia, Pirani, Monica, Ferrari, Lorenza, Bellatalla, Caterina, Fusco, Maria, Panico, Margherita, Perrotta, Carmela, Vassante, Biagio, Traina, Adele, Carruba, Giuseppe, Cusimano, Rosanna, Amodio, Rosalba, Dolcemascolo, Cecilia, Staiti, Rosalba, Zarcone, Maurizio, Michiara, Maria, Bozzani, Francesco, Sgargi, Paolo, Cilia, Sonia, La Rosa, Maria Guglielmina, Cascone, Giuseppe, Frasca, Graziella, Giurdanella, Maria Concetta, Martorana, Caterina, Morana, Gabriele, Nicita, Carmela, Rollo, Patrizia, Ruggeri, Maria Grazia, Sigona, Aurora, Spata, Eugenia, Vacirca, Stefania, Di Felice, Enza, Pezzarossi, Annamaria, Caroli, Stefania, Pellegri, Carlotta, Vicentini, Massimo, Storchi, Cinzia, Cavuto, Silvio, Costa, Jaqueline, Falcini, Fabio, Colamartini, Americo, Balducci, Chiara, Ravegnani, Mila, Vitali, Benedetta, Cordaro, Carlo, Caprara, Licia, Giuliani, Orietta, Giorgetti, Stefania, Salvatore, Silvia, Palumbo, Monica, Vattiato, Rosa, Ravaioli, Alessandra, Foca, Flavia, Rinaldi, Elisa, Donato, Andrea, Iannelli, Arturo, Senatore, Gennaro, Zevola, Arrigo, Budroni, Mario, Cesaraccio, Rosaria, Pirino, Daniela, Carboni, Donatella, Fiori, Giovanna, Soddu, Marcella, Mameli, Gianpaolo, Mura, Francesco, Contrino, Maria Lia, Tisano, Francesco, Sciacca, Salvatore, Muni, Angela, Mizzi, Margherita, Russo, Maria, Tessandori, Roberto, Ardemagni, Giuseppina, Gianola, Luigi, Maspero, Sergio, Annulli, Monica Lucia, Moroni, Elena, Roberto, Guglielmana, Zanetti, Roberto, Rosso, Stefano, Prandi, Rossana, Sobrato, Irene, Gilardi, Franca, Busso, Paola, Franchini, Silva, Gentilini, Maria A., Battisti, Laura, Cappelletti, Maddalena, Moser, Marilena, La Rosa, Francesco, D Alo, Daniela, Scheibel, Massimo, Costarelli, Daniela, Spano, Francesco, Rossini, Stefania, Santucci, Cinzia, Petrinelli, Anna Maria, Solimene, Clotilde, Bianconi, Fortunato, Brunori, Valerio, Crosignani, Paolo, Contiero, Paolo, Preto, Lucia, Tittarelli, Andrea, Maghini, Anna, Codazzi, Tiziana, Frassoldi, Emanuela, Gada, Daniela, Costa, Enrica, Di Grazia, Laura, Zambon, Paola, Baracco, Maddalena, Bovo, Emanuela, Dal Cin, Antonella, Fiore, Anna Rita, Greco, Alessandra, Monetti, Daniele, Rosano, Alberto, Stocco, Carmen, Tognazzo, Sandro, Donato, Francesco, Limina, Rosa Maria, Adorni, Anna, Andreis, Paolo, Zani, Giuseppe, Piovani, Francesco, Salvi, Ornella, Puleio, Maria, Vitarelli, Susanna, Antonini, Silvia, Candela, Giuseppina, Pappalardo, Giuseppe, Scuderi, Tiziana, Lottero, Barbara, Ribaudo, Michele, Ricci, Paolo, Guarda, Linda, Gatti, Luciana, Bozzeda, Annalaura, Dall Acqua, Maria, Pironi, Vanda, Sutera Sardo, Antonella, Mazzei, Adriana, Sirianni, Nicola, Lavecchia, Anna Maria, Mancuso, Pierina, Usala, Mario, Pala, Filomena, Sini, Giovanna Maria, Pintori, Nicolina, Canu, Luisa, Demurtas, Giuliana, Doa, Nina, Pisani, Paola, Pastore, Guido, Magnani, Corrado, Terracini, Benedetto, Cena, Tiziana, Alessi, Daniela, Baussano, Iacopo, Merletti, Franco, Maule, Milena, Mosso, Maria Luisa, Nonnato, Marinella, Rasulo, Assunta, Richiardi, Lorenzo, Zuccolo, Luisa, Pivetta, Emanuele, Dalmasso, Paola, Macerata, Vanda, Ponz Leon, Maurizio, Domati, Federica, Rossi, Giuseppina, Goldoni, Carlo Alberto, Rossi, Federica, Gaetani, Carmela, Benatti, Piero, Roncucci, Luca, Di Gregorio, Carmela, Pedroni, Monica, Pezzi, Annalisa, Maffei, Stefania, Mariani, Francesco, Enrica Borsi, Cocchioni, Mario, Pascucci, Cristiana, Gennaro, Valerio, Lazzarotto, Anna, Benfatto, Lucia, Mazzucco, Giovanna, Montanaro, Fabio, AIRTUM Working Group […, Enrica, Borsi, and …]
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Time Factors ,Adolescent ,Databases, Factual ,Remission Induction ,Infant ,Middle Aged ,CANCER ,Cancer prevalence ,Italy ,Epidemiologic Studies ,Young Adult ,Child, Preschool ,Neoplasms ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Long-term survivors ,Female ,Registries ,Survivors ,Child ,Aged - Abstract
OBJECTIVES: the aim of the present monograph is to update the estimation of the number of people living with cancer in Italy, to describe geographic variability, and estimate the number of long-term survivors, i.e., people living five years or more after a cancer diagnosis. MATERIALS AND METHODS: the study included the data of the AIRTUMdatabase. Twenty-four Cancer Registries (CRs) (covering 27% of the Italian population) collected information on the incidence and vital status of 1,275,353 cases diagnosed between 1978 and 2005. For each CR, the observed prevalence was calculated up to the maximum observable duration. To estimate the complete prevalence (all living patients, independently from time since diagnosis) and the prevalence for lengths of time exceeding the CR maximum duration of registration, the observed prevalence was corrected through a completeness index. Completeness indices, gender, age and site specific, were estimated by means of statistical regression models using cancer incidence and survival data available from CRs with more than 15 years of observation. As of 1 January 2006, the prevalence was estimated (as absolute numbers and as a proportion per 100,000 inhabitants) for 46 cancer sites, by gender, age class, years since diagnosis and geographic areas. RESULTS: as of 2006, 2,244,000 persons (4%of the Italian population) were alive with a cancer diagnosis. A relevant geographic variability emerged, with proportions between 4%-5% among CRs in the Centre and North of Italy, and proportions between 2%-3% in the South. Forty-four percent of prevalent subjects (988,000) were males and 56% (1,256,000) females. Fifty-seven percent (1,285,680 people, 2.2% of total population) of these patients was represented by long-term survivors. In patients aged 75 years or more, the proportions of prevalent cases were 19%in males and 13%in females, and 10%between 60 and 75 years of age in both genders.More than half a million Italian women were alive with a breast cancer diagnosis (42%of women with a neoplasm), followed by women with cancers of the colonrectum (12%), corpus uteri (7%), thyroid (5%), and cervix uteri (4%). In men, 22%of prevalent cases (216,716) included patients with prostate cancer, 18% with bladder cancer, and 15%with colon-rectum cancer. Percentages of long-term survivors higher than 70% were reported for cancers of the cervix uteri (82% at five years, and 55% at 15 years from diagnosis), Hodgkin lymphoma, testis, brain and central nervous system, bone and connective tissue. Many patients with these types of cancers (often occurring in young people) can be considered "cured", i.e., with a life expectancy overlapping that of the general population.The estimated proportions of prevalent cases emerging from this study in Italy were quite similar to those reported in Northern Europe, but at least 15%lower than those in the United States. CONCLUSIONS: in 2006, the number of prevalent cases nearly doubled compared to 1992. The increase over time in the proportion of elderly patients, related to population ageing, requires adequate health policies. Knowing the number of people alive many years after cancer diagnosis (either cured or long-term survivors) provides the scientific bases for the definition of health policies focusing on them. Furthermore, it promotes the conduction of studies aimed at improving the present knowledge on the quality of life of these patients during and after the active phase of treatments, in addition to studies on the long-term effects of treatments.
28. Liquid Biopsy at Home: Delivering Precision Medicine for Patients with Cancer During the Covid-19 Pandemic
- Author
-
Stefania Napolitano, Vincenza Caputo, Anna Ventriglia, Giulia Martini, Carminia Maria Della Corte, Vincenzo De Falco, Stefano Ferretti, Erika Martinelli, Floriana Morgillo, Davide Ciardiello, Ferdinando De Vita, Michele Orditura, Morena Fasano, Fortunato Ciardiello, Teresa Troiani, Napolitano, Stefania, Caputo, Vincenza, Ventriglia, Anna, Martini, Giulia, Della Corte, Carminia Maria, De Falco, Vincenzo, Ferretti, Stefano, Martinelli, Erika, Morgillo, Floriana, Ciardiello, Davide, De Vita, Ferdinando, Orditura, Michele, Fasano, Morena, Ciardiello, Fortunato, and Troiani, Teresa
- Subjects
Cancer Research ,Oncology ,Neoplasms ,Liquid Biopsy ,COVID-19 ,Humans ,Precision Medicine ,Pandemics - Abstract
CoronaVirus disease-2019 has changed the delivery of health care worldwide and the pandemic has challenged oncologists to reorganize cancer care. Recently, progress has been made in the field of precision medicine to provide to patients with cancer the best therapeutic choice for their individual needs. In this context, the Foundation Medicine (FMI)-Liquid@Home project has emerged as a key weapon to deal with the new pandemic situation. FoundationOne Liquid Assay (F1L) is a next-generation sequences-based liquid biopsy service, able to detect 324 molecular alterations and genomic signatures, from May 2020 available at patients’ home (FMI-Liquid@Home). We analyzed time and costs saving for patients with cancer, their caregivers and National Healthcare System (NHS) with FMI-Liquid@Home versus F1L performed at our Department. Different variables have been evaluated. Between May 2020 and August 2021, 218 FMI-Liquid@Home were performed for patients with cancer in Italy. Among these, our Department performed 153 FMI-Liquid@Home with the success rate of 98% (vs. 95% for F1L in the hospital). Time saving for patients and their caregivers was 494.86 and 427.36 hours, respectively, and costs saving was 13 548.70€. Moreover, for working people these savings were 1084.71 hours and 31 239.65€, respectively. In addition, the total gain for the hospital was 163.5 hours and 6785€, whereas for NHS was 1084.71 hours and 51 573.60€, respectively. FMI-Liquid@Home service appears to be useful and convenient allowing time and costs saving for patients, caregivers, and NHS. Born during the COVID-19 pandemic, it could be integrated in oncological daily routine in the future. Therefore, additional studies are needed to better understand the overall gain and how to integrate this service in different countries.
- Published
- 2022
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.