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Gender Differences in Sinonasal Cancer Incidence: Data from the Italian Registry.

Authors :
Binazzi, Alessandra
di Marzio, Davide
Mensi, Carolina
Consonni, Dario
Miligi, Lucia
Piro, Sara
Zajacovà, Jana
Sorasio, Denise
Galli, Paolo
Camagni, Angela
Calisti, Roberto
Massacesi, Stefania
Cozzi, Ilaria
Balestri, Anna
Murano, Stefano
Fedeli, Ugo
Comiati, Vera
Eccher, Silvia
Lattanzio, Sara
Marinaccio, Alessandro
Source :
Cancers. Jun2024, Vol. 16 Issue 11, p2053. 12p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Simple Summary: Sinonasal cancer (SNC) is strongly associated with occupational exposure to several carcinogens involved in SNC's etiology, which vary by gender. Gender differences in SNC cases were examined through the Italian sinonasal cancer registry. Male-to-female incidence differences are neglectable in the youngest age classes but increase in older age classes, probably as a result of more men being diagnosed with SNC due to their greater occupational exposure to carcinogens (mostly wood and leather dusts) compared with women. Occupational exposures to carcinogens were the most frequent in both genders. A high percentage of women had unlikely exposures. Gender differences deserve more deep investigation, starting with a review of diagnostic processes and occupational history taking. Background: Although rare, sinonasal cancers (SNCs) have a high occupational attributable fraction. Methods: We applied gender-based approaches to descriptive analyses, incidence, and patterns of exposures using the Italian National Sinonasal Cancer Registry (ReNaTuNS: Registro Nazionale Tumori Naso-Sinusali). Results: The study included 2851 SNC patients. SNC was diagnosed more often in men (73%) than in women (27%). The most frequent morphology in men was intestinal-type adenocarcinoma (33%), whereas in women, it was squamous cell carcinoma (49%). Nasal cavities were predominant in both genders (50%), ethmoidal sinus in men (24%), and maxillary in women (24%). Incidence rates were 0.76 (per 100,000 person-years) in men and 0.24 in women and increased by age, more evidently in men, peaking over 75 years in both. Occupational exposures to wood and leather dusts were the most frequent (41% for men, 33% for women). Few exposures were extra-occupational or domestic. Unlikely exposure was relevant in women (57%). Conclusions: The surveillance of SNC cases through a registry that allows for the identification of and compensation for this occupational disease is important in Italy, where numerous workers are exposed to carcinogens for SNC, without even being aware. Considering the rarity of the disease, particularly among women, the ReNaTuNS can provide a method to analyze gender differences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20726694
Volume :
16
Issue :
11
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Cancers
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177874131
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16112053