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Cancer cure for 32 cancer types: results from the EUROCARE-5 study.

Authors :
Dal Maso L
Panato C
Tavilla A
Guzzinati S
Serraino D
Mallone S
Botta L
Boussari O
Capocaccia R
Colonna M
Crocetti E
Dumas A
Dyba T
Franceschi S
Gatta G
Gigli A
Giusti F
Jooste V
Minicozzi P
Neamtiu L
Romain G
Zorzi M
De Angelis R
Francisci S
Source :
International journal of epidemiology [Int J Epidemiol] 2020 Oct 01; Vol. 49 (5), pp. 1517-1525.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Background: Few studies have estimated the probability of being cured for cancer patients. This study aims to estimate population-based indicators of cancer cure in Europe by type, sex, age and period.<br />Methods: 7.2 million cancer patients (42 population-based cancer registries in 17 European countries) diagnosed at ages 15-74 years in 1990-2007 with follow-up to 2008 were selected from the EUROCARE-5 dataset. Mixture-cure models were used to estimate: (i) life expectancy of fatal cases (LEF); (ii) cure fraction (CF) as proportion of patients with same death rates as the general population; (iii) time to cure (TTC) as time to reach 5-year conditional relative survival (CRS) >95%.<br />Results: LEF ranged from 10 years for chronic lymphocytic leukaemia patients to <6 months for those with liver, pancreas, brain, gallbladder and lung cancers. It was 7.7 years for patients with prostate cancer at age 65-74 years and >5 years for women with breast cancer. The CF was 94% for testis, 87% for thyroid cancer in women and 70% in men, 86% for skin melanoma in women and 76% in men, 66% for breast, 63% for prostate and <10% for liver, lung and pancreatic cancers. TTC was <5 years for testis and thyroid cancer patients diagnosed below age 55 years, and <10 years for stomach, colorectal, corpus uteri and melanoma patients of all ages. For breast and prostate cancers, a small excess (CRS < 95%) remained for at least 15 years.<br />Conclusions: Estimates from this analysis should help to reduce unneeded medicalization and costs. They represent an opportunity to improve patients' quality of life.<br /> (© The Author(s) 2020; all rights reserved. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Epidemiological Association.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1464-3685
Volume :
49
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
International journal of epidemiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
32984907
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/ije/dyaa128