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  3. Impact of era of diagnosis on cause-specific late mortality among 77 423 five-year European survivors of childhood and adolescent cancer: the PanCareSurFup consortium.
 

Impact of era of diagnosis on cause-specific late mortality among 77 423 five-year European survivors of childhood and adolescent cancer: the PanCareSurFup consortium.

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/159693
Publisher DOI
10.1002/ijc.33817
PubMed ID
34551126
Description
Late mortality of European five-year survivors of childhood or adolescent cancer has dropped over the last 60 years, but excess mortality persists. There is little information concerning secular trends in cause-specific mortality among older European survivors. PanCareSurFup pooled data from 12 cancer registries and clinics in 11 European countries from 77 423 five-year survivors of cancer diagnosed before age 21 between 1940 to 2008 followed for an average age of 21 years and a total of 1.27 million person-years to determine their risk of death using cumulative mortality, standardized mortality ratios (SMR), absolute excess risks (AER), and multivariable proportional hazards regression analyses. At the end of follow-up 9166 survivors (11.8%) had died compared to 927 expected (SMR 9.89, 95% confidence interval [95%CI] 9.69-10.09), AER 6.47 per 1000 person-years, (95%CI 6.32-6.62). At 60-68 years of attained age all-cause mortality was still higher than expected (SMR = 2.41, 95%CI 1.90-3.02). Overall cumulative mortality at 25 years from diagnosis dropped from 18.4% (95%CI 16.5-20.4) to 7.3% (95%CI 6.7-8.0) over the observation period. Compared to the diagnosis period 1960-69, the mortality hazard ratio declined for first neoplasms (p for trend <0.0001) and for infections (P < 0.0001); declines in relative mortality from second neoplasms and cardiovascular causes were less pronounced (P = 0.1105 and P = 0.0829, respectively). PanCareSurFup is the largest study with the longest follow-up of late mortality among European childhood and adolescent cancer five-year survivors, and documents significant mortality declines among European survivors into modern eras. However, continuing excess mortality highlights survivors' long-term care needs. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
Date of Publication
2022-02-01
Publication Type
article
Subject(s)
600 - Technology::610 - Medicine & health
300 - Social sciences, sociology & anthropology::360 - Social problems & social services
Keyword(s)
European cardiovascular causes of death late mortality second malignant neoplasms survivors of childhood cancer
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Byrne, Julianne
Schmidtmann, Irene
Rashid, Humayra
Hagberg, Oskar
Bagnasco, Francesca
Bardi, Edit
De Vathaire, Florent
Essiaf, Samira
Winther, Jeanette Falck
Frey, Eva
Gudmundsdottir, Thorgerdur
Haupt, Riccardo
Hawkins, Michael M
Jakab, Zsuzsanna
Jankovic, Momcilo
Kaatsch, Peter
Kremer, Leontien C M
Kühni, Claudia
Institut für Sozial- und Präventivmedizin (ISPM)
Universitätsklinik für Kinderheilkunde
Harila-Saari, Arja
Levitt, Gill
Reulen, Raoul
Ronckers, Cécile M
Maule, Milena
Skinner, Roderick
Steliarova-Foucher, Eva
Terenziani, Monica
Zadravec Zaletel, Lorna
Hjorth, Lars
Garwicz, Stanislaw
Grabow, Desiree
Additional Credits
Institut für Sozial- und Präventivmedizin (ISPM)
Series
International journal of cancer
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
ISSN
0020-7136
Access(Rights)
open.access
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