mdlinx mdlinx
Oncology Articles on MDLinx

Breast and cervical cancer in 187 countries between 1980 and 2010: A systematic analysis The Lancet, 10/21/2011

Forouzanfar MH et al. – Breast and cervical cancer are important causes of mortality in women aged ≥15 years. We undertook annual age-specific assessments of breast and cervical cancer in 187 countries.

Methods

  • Systematically collected cancer registry data on mortality and incidence, vital registration, and verbal autopsy data for the period 1980—2010
  • Modelled the mortality-to-incidence (MI) ratio using a hierarchical model
  • Vital registration and verbal autopsy were supplemented with incidence multiplied by the MI ratio to yield a comprehensive database of mortality rates
  • Used Gaussian process regression to develop estimates of mortality with uncertainty by age, sex, country, and year
  • Used out-of-sample predictive validity to select the final model
  • Estimates of incidence with uncertainty were also generated with mortality and MI ratios

Results
  • Global breast cancer incidence increased from 641 000 (95% uncertainty intervals 610 000—750 000) cases in 1980 to 1 643 000 (1 421 000—1 782 000) cases in 2010, an annual rate of increase of 3·1%
  • Global cervical cancer incidence increased from 378 000 (256 000—489 000) cases per year in 1980 to 454 000 (318 000—620 000) cases per year in 2010—a 0·6% annual rate of increase
  • Breast cancer killed 425 000 (359 000—453 000) women in 2010, of whom 68 000 (62 000—74 000) were aged 15—49 years in developing countries
  • Cervical cancer death rates have been decreasing but the disease still killed 200 000 (139 000—276 000) women in 2010, of whom 46 000 (33 000—64 000) were aged 15—49 years in developing countries
  • Recorded pronounced variation in trend in breast cancer mortality across regions and countries

Read this article on The Lancet



Register now to view all the MDLinx contents (FREE)!

  • Stay current on the latest literature, research and clinical news
  • Get special communications and offers from MDLinx and our sponsors
  • Receive invitations to paid market research
View Samples and Register

Stay current - Media Tool

Newsletter
RSS
Follow Us
Facebook

Receive free subspecialty
"5-minute updates" via email

Sign up!

Send the E-mail Newsletter to a Colleague


Send

Subscribe to our free RSS feeds:
Get the latest news in your specialty automatically added to your newsreader or your personal My Yahoo!, Google, My MSN or My AOL page. Learn More

Follow Us on Twitter
Twitter is a rich source of instantly updated information. Join today and follow @MDLinx to start receiving tweets. Learn More

Close