| Literature DB >> 27743145 |
Marios K Georgakis1, Maria A Karalexi1, Eleni I Kalogirou1, Anton Ryzhov2, Anna Zborovskaya3, Nadya Dimitrova4, Sultan Eser5, Luis Antunes6, Mario Sekerija7, Tina Zagar8, Joana Bastos9, Domenic Agius10, Margareta Florea11, Daniela Coza12, Evdoxia Bouka1, Charis Bourgioti13, Helen Dana14, Emmanuel Hatzipantelis15, Maria Moschovi16, Savvas Papadopoulos17, Georgios Sfakianos18, Evgenia Papakonstantinou19, Sophia Polychronopoulou20, Spyros Sgouros21, Kalliopi Stefanaki22, Eftichia Stiakaki23, Katerina Strantzia24, Basilios Zountsas25, Apostolos Pourtsidis26, Eustratios Patsouris27, Eleni Th Petridou28.
Abstract
Pilocytic astrocytomas (PA) comprise the most common childhood central nervous system (CNS) tumor. Exploiting registry-based data from Southern and Eastern Europe (SEE) and SEER, US, we opted to examine incidence, time trends, survival and tentative outcome disparities of childhood PA by sociodemographic and clinical features. Childhood PA were retrieved from 12 SEE registries (N = 552; 1983-2014) and SEER (N = 2723; 1973-2012). Age-standardized incidence rates (ASR) were estimated and survival was examined via Kaplan-Meier and Cox regression analysis. ASR of childhood PA during 1990-2012 in SEE was 4.2/106, doubling in the USA (8.2/106). Increasing trends, more prominent during earlier registration years, were recorded in both areas (SEE: +4.1 %, USA: +4.6 %, annually). Cerebellum comprised the most common location, apart from infants in whom supratentorial locations prevailed. Age at diagnosis was 1 year earlier in SEE, whereas 10-year survival was 87 % in SEE and 96 % in SEER, improving over time. Significant outcome predictors were age <1 year at diagnosis diagnosis (hazard ratio, HR [95% confidence intervals]: 3.96, [2.28-6.90]), female gender (HR: 1.38, [1.01-1.88]), residence in SEE (HR: 4.07, [2.95-5.61]) and rural areas (HR: 2.23, [1.53-3.27]), whereas non-cerebellar locations were associated with a 9- to 12-fold increase in risk of death. The first comprehensive overview of childhood PA epidemiology showed survival gains but also outcome discrepancies by geographical region and urbanization pointing to healthcare inequalities. The worse prognosis of infants and, possibly, females merits further consideration, as it might point to treatment adjustment needs, whereas expansion of systematic registration will allow interpretation of incidence variations.Entities:
Keywords: CNS tumors; Cancer registries; Childhood; Incidence; Pilocytic astrocytomas; Survival
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27743145 DOI: 10.1007/s11060-016-2284-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurooncol ISSN: 0167-594X Impact factor: 4.130