Literature DB >> 29395269

Global surveillance of trends in cancer survival 2000-14 (CONCORD-3): analysis of individual records for 37 513 025 patients diagnosed with one of 18 cancers from 322 population-based registries in 71 countries.

Claudia Allemani1, Tomohiro Matsuda2, Veronica Di Carlo3, Rhea Harewood3, Melissa Matz3, Maja Nikšić3, Audrey Bonaventure3, Mikhail Valkov4, Christopher J Johnson5, Jacques Estève6, Olufemi J Ogunbiyi7, Gulnar Azevedo E Silva8, Wan-Qing Chen9, Sultan Eser10, Gerda Engholm11, Charles A Stiller12, Alain Monnereau13, Ryan R Woods14, Otto Visser15, Gek Hsiang Lim16, Joanne Aitken17, Hannah K Weir18, Michel P Coleman3.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In 2015, the second cycle of the CONCORD programme established global surveillance of cancer survival as a metric of the effectiveness of health systems and to inform global policy on cancer control. CONCORD-3 updates the worldwide surveillance of cancer survival to 2014.
METHODS: CONCORD-3 includes individual records for 37·5 million patients diagnosed with cancer during the 15-year period 2000-14. Data were provided by 322 population-based cancer registries in 71 countries and territories, 47 of which provided data with 100% population coverage. The study includes 18 cancers or groups of cancers: oesophagus, stomach, colon, rectum, liver, pancreas, lung, breast (women), cervix, ovary, prostate, and melanoma of the skin in adults, and brain tumours, leukaemias, and lymphomas in both adults and children. Standardised quality control procedures were applied; errors were rectified by the registry concerned. We estimated 5-year net survival. Estimates were age-standardised with the International Cancer Survival Standard weights.
FINDINGS: For most cancers, 5-year net survival remains among the highest in the world in the USA and Canada, in Australia and New Zealand, and in Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden. For many cancers, Denmark is closing the survival gap with the other Nordic countries. Survival trends are generally increasing, even for some of the more lethal cancers: in some countries, survival has increased by up to 5% for cancers of the liver, pancreas, and lung. For women diagnosed during 2010-14, 5-year survival for breast cancer is now 89·5% in Australia and 90·2% in the USA, but international differences remain very wide, with levels as low as 66·1% in India. For gastrointestinal cancers, the highest levels of 5-year survival are seen in southeast Asia: in South Korea for cancers of the stomach (68·9%), colon (71·8%), and rectum (71·1%); in Japan for oesophageal cancer (36·0%); and in Taiwan for liver cancer (27·9%). By contrast, in the same world region, survival is generally lower than elsewhere for melanoma of the skin (59·9% in South Korea, 52·1% in Taiwan, and 49·6% in China), and for both lymphoid malignancies (52·5%, 50·5%, and 38·3%) and myeloid malignancies (45·9%, 33·4%, and 24·8%). For children diagnosed during 2010-14, 5-year survival for acute lymphoblastic leukaemia ranged from 49·8% in Ecuador to 95·2% in Finland. 5-year survival from brain tumours in children is higher than for adults but the global range is very wide (from 28·9% in Brazil to nearly 80% in Sweden and Denmark).
INTERPRETATION: The CONCORD programme enables timely comparisons of the overall effectiveness of health systems in providing care for 18 cancers that collectively represent 75% of all cancers diagnosed worldwide every year. It contributes to the evidence base for global policy on cancer control. Since 2017, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development has used findings from the CONCORD programme as the official benchmark of cancer survival, among their indicators of the quality of health care in 48 countries worldwide. Governments must recognise population-based cancer registries as key policy tools that can be used to evaluate both the impact of cancer prevention strategies and the effectiveness of health systems for all patients diagnosed with cancer. FUNDING: American Cancer Society; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; Swiss Re; Swiss Cancer Research foundation; Swiss Cancer League; Institut National du Cancer; La Ligue Contre le Cancer; Rossy Family Foundation; US National Cancer Institute; and the Susan G Komen Foundation.
Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 29395269      PMCID: PMC5879496          DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(17)33326-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lancet        ISSN: 0140-6736            Impact factor:   79.321


  72 in total

1.  Role of age and tumour stage in the temporal pattern of 'cure' from stomach cancer: a population-based study in Osaka, Japan.

Authors:  Yuri Ito; Tomio Nakayama; Hideaki Tsukuma; Isao Miyashiro; Akiko Ioka; Tomoyuki Sugimoto; Bernard Rachet
Journal:  Cancer Epidemiol       Date:  2012-01-31       Impact factor: 2.984

2.  Public health, universal health coverage, and Sustainable Development Goals: can they coexist?

Authors:  Harald Schmidt; Lawrence O Gostin; Ezekiel J Emanuel
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2015-06-29       Impact factor: 79.321

3.  Population-based cancer survival in the United States: Data, quality control, and statistical methods.

Authors:  Claudia Allemani; Rhea Harewood; Christopher J Johnson; Helena Carreira; Devon Spika; Audrey Bonaventure; Kevin Ward; Hannah K Weir; Michel P Coleman
Journal:  Cancer       Date:  2017-12-15       Impact factor: 6.860

4.  Proposed classification of lymphoid neoplasms for epidemiologic research from the Pathology Working Group of the International Lymphoma Epidemiology Consortium (InterLymph).

Authors:  Lindsay M Morton; Jennifer J Turner; James R Cerhan; Martha S Linet; Patrick A Treseler; Christina A Clarke; Andrew Jack; Wendy Cozen; Marc Maynadié; John J Spinelli; Adele Seniori Costantini; Thomas Rüdiger; Aldo Scarpa; Tongzhang Zheng; Dennis D Weisenburger
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2007-03-27       Impact factor: 22.113

5.  Global surveillance of cancer survival 1995-2009: analysis of individual data for 25,676,887 patients from 279 population-based registries in 67 countries (CONCORD-2).

Authors:  Claudia Allemani; Hannah K Weir; Helena Carreira; Rhea Harewood; Devon Spika; Xiao-Si Wang; Finian Bannon; Jane V Ahn; Christopher J Johnson; Audrey Bonaventure; Rafael Marcos-Gragera; Charles Stiller; Gulnar Azevedo e Silva; Wan-Qing Chen; Olufemi J Ogunbiyi; Bernard Rachet; Matthew J Soeberg; Hui You; Tomohiro Matsuda; Magdalena Bielska-Lasota; Hans Storm; Thomas C Tucker; Michel P Coleman
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2014-11-26       Impact factor: 79.321

6.  [Cancer survival before and after initiating the Danish Cancer Control plan].

Authors:  Hans Henrik Storm; Mette Gislum; Gerda Engholm
Journal:  Ugeskr Laeger       Date:  2008-09-22

7.  Cancer control activities in the Republic of Korea.

Authors:  Keun-Young Yoo
Journal:  Jpn J Clin Oncol       Date:  2008-04-11       Impact factor: 3.019

8.  Cancer incidence and mortality worldwide: sources, methods and major patterns in GLOBOCAN 2012.

Authors:  Jacques Ferlay; Isabelle Soerjomataram; Rajesh Dikshit; Sultan Eser; Colin Mathers; Marise Rebelo; Donald Maxwell Parkin; David Forman; Freddie Bray
Journal:  Int J Cancer       Date:  2014-10-09       Impact factor: 7.396

9.  Full dates (day, month, year) should be used in population-based cancer survival studies.

Authors:  Laura M Woods; Bernard Rachet; Libby Ellis; Michel P Coleman
Journal:  Int J Cancer       Date:  2012-04-16       Impact factor: 7.396

10.  Combining cohort and period methods for retrospective time trend analyses of long-term cancer patient survival rates.

Authors:  H Brenner; C Spix
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2003-10-06       Impact factor: 7.640

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  968 in total

1.  The influence of birth cohort and calendar period on global trends in ovarian cancer incidence.

Authors:  Citadel J Cabasag; Melina Arnold; John Butler; Manami Inoue; Britton Trabert; Penelope M Webb; Freddie Bray; Isabelle Soerjomataram
Journal:  Int J Cancer       Date:  2019-04-30       Impact factor: 7.396

2.  Effect of Laparoscopic vs Open Distal Gastrectomy on 3-Year Disease-Free Survival in Patients With Locally Advanced Gastric Cancer: The CLASS-01 Randomized Clinical Trial.

Authors:  Jiang Yu; Changming Huang; Yihong Sun; Xiangqian Su; Hui Cao; Jiankun Hu; Kuan Wang; Jian Suo; Kaixiong Tao; Xianli He; Hongbo Wei; Mingang Ying; Weiguo Hu; Xiaohui Du; Yanfeng Hu; Hao Liu; Chaohui Zheng; Ping Li; Jianwei Xie; Fenglin Liu; Ziyu Li; Gang Zhao; Kun Yang; Chunxiao Liu; Haojie Li; Pingyan Chen; Jiafu Ji; Guoxin Li
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  2019-05-28       Impact factor: 56.272

Review 3.  The State-of-the-Art of Phase II/III Clinical Trials for Targeted Pancreatic Cancer Therapies.

Authors:  Andres Garcia-Sampedro; Gabriella Gaggia; Alexander Ney; Ismahan Mahamed; Pilar Acedo
Journal:  J Clin Med       Date:  2021-02-03       Impact factor: 4.241

4.  Psychometric development of a new body image scale for breast cancer survivors.

Authors:  Erika Biederman; Andrea Cohee; Patrick Monahan; Timothy Stump; Victoria Champion
Journal:  Health Care Women Int       Date:  2019-06-25

5.  Foxo3a-dependent miR-633 regulates chemotherapeutic sensitivity in gastric cancer by targeting Fas-associated death domain.

Authors:  Xin Pang; Zhixia Zhou; Zhuang Yu; Lichun Han; Zhijuan Lin; Xiang Ao; Chang Liu; Yuqi He; Murugavel Ponnusamy; Peifeng Li; Jianxun Wang
Journal:  RNA Biol       Date:  2019-01-22       Impact factor: 4.652

6.  Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of Afatinib, Erlotinib, and Gefitinib as First-Line Treatments for EGFR Mutation-Positive Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer in Ontario, Canada.

Authors:  Yong-Jin Kim; Mark Oremus; Helen H Chen; Thomas McFarlane; Danielle Fearon; Susan Horton
Journal:  Pharmacoeconomics       Date:  2021-03-31       Impact factor: 4.981

7.  Endocannabinoid system and the expression of endogenous ceramides in human hepatocellular carcinoma.

Authors:  Jiayong Yang; Yifeng Tian; Ruihe Zheng; Lei Li; Funan Qiu
Journal:  Oncol Lett       Date:  2019-05-27       Impact factor: 2.967

8.  Political priority and pathways to scale-up of childhood cancer care in five nations.

Authors:  Avram E Denburg; Adriana Ramirez; Suresh Pavuluri; Erin McCann; Shivani Shah; Tricia Alcasabas; Federico Antillon; Ramandeep Arora; Soad Fuentes-Alabi; Lorna Renner; Catherine Lam; Paola Friedrich; Brandon Maser; Lisa Force; Carlos Rodriguez Galindo; Rifat Atun
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2019-08-19       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 9.  New Frontiers for Fairer Breast Cancer Care in a Globalized World.

Authors:  Didier Verhoeven; Claudia Allemani; Cary Kaufman; Sabine Siesling; Manuela Joore; Etienne Brain; Mauricio Magalhães Costa
Journal:  Eur J Breast Health       Date:  2021-03-31

Review 10.  On the architecture of translational research designed to control chronic lymphocytic leukemia.

Authors:  Michael Hallek
Journal:  Hematology Am Soc Hematol Educ Program       Date:  2018-11-30
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