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Indicators of cure for women living after uterine and ovarian cancers: a population-based study.

Authors :
Giudici F
De Paoli A
Toffolutti F
Guzzinati S
Francisci S
Bucchi L
Gatta G
Demuru E
Mallone S
Cin AD
Caldarella A
Cuccaro F
Migliore E
Gambino ML
Ravaioli A
Puppo A
Ferrante M
Carrozzi G
Stracci F
Musolino A
Gasparotti C
Cavallo R
Mazzucco W
Vitale MF
Cascone G
Ballotari P
Ferretti S
Mangone L
Rizzello RV
Sampietro G
Mian M
Boschetti L
Galasso R
Bella F
Piras D
Sessa A
Seghini P
Fanetti AC
Pinna P
De Angelis R
Serraino D
Maso LD
Source :
American journal of epidemiology [Am J Epidemiol] 2024 Sep 03; Vol. 193 (9), pp. 1224-1232.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

This study aims to estimate long-term survival, cancer prevalence, and several cure indicators for Italian women with gynecological cancers. Thirty-one cancer registries, representing 47% of the Italian female population, were included. Mixture cure models were used to estimate net survival, cure fraction, time to cure (when 5-year conditional net survival becomes > 95%), cure prevalence (women who will not die of cancer), and already cured (living longer than time to cure). In 2018, 0.4% (121 704) of Italian women were alive after diagnosis of corpus uteri cancer, 0.2% (52 551) after cervical cancer, and 0.2% (52 153) after ovarian cancer. More than 90% of patients with uterine cancers and 83% with ovarian cancer will not die from their neoplasm (cure prevalence). Women with gynecological cancers have a residual excess risk of death <5% at 5 years after diagnosis. The cure fraction was 69% for corpus uteri, 32% for ovarian, and 58% for cervical cancer patients. Time to cure was ≤10 years for women with gynecological cancers aged <55 years; 74% of patients with cervical cancer, 63% with corpus uteri cancer, and 55% with ovarian cancer were already cured. These results can contribute to improving follow-up programs for women with gynecological cancers and supporting efforts against discrimination of already cured ones. This article is part of a Special Collection on Gynecological Cancers.<br /> (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1476-6256
Volume :
193
Issue :
9
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
American journal of epidemiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38629583
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/aje/kwae044