| Literature DB >> 34805620 |
Mimoza M Ristova1,2,3, Vesna Gershan1, Herwig Schopper2,3, Ugo Amaldi4, Manjit Dosanjh3,5.
Abstract
PURPOSE: A recent initiative was launched for establishing the South-East European International Institute for Sustainable Technologies (SEEIIST), which will provide a cutting-edge Hadron radiation therapy treatment and research institute for treating cancer patients with Hadron therapy (HT). To justify the initiative for building the SEEIIST facility, a study was conducted to estimate the number of patients with cancer from the SEE region that would be eligible for HT. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Two different methods for projecting the future annual cancer incidence have been applied: (1) using the International Agency on Research on Cancer@World Health Organization's (WHO) Globocan model which uses country's demographic factors, and (2) averaging the crude incidence data of 3 SEE countries with available national cancer registries, using a linear regression model of combined incidence per 100,000, and applying it to the entire SEE region. Cancer epidemiology data were collected and studied by using the countries' cancer datasheets from WHO. The top 10 cancers were presented for the SEE region. Studies of other countries were used to develop a primordial model for estimating the number of SEE patients who could be treated most successfully with HT upon SEEIIST commissioning in 2030.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34805620 PMCID: PMC8581504 DOI: 10.1016/j.adro.2021.100772
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Radiat Oncol ISSN: 2452-1094
Fig. 1(a) Cancer incidence (crude rate per 100,000) in South-East European countries (except Kosovo) in comparison with some European countries. (b) Mortality-to-incidence ratio 2018, for all cancer cases except nonmelanoma skin cancers in the South-East European countries (except for Kosovo) red bars and several Western European countries for comparison (source: Globocan). Abbreviations: SEE = South-East European.
Fig. 2(a) New cancer cases in 3 South-East European (SEE) countries and projections for 2020, 2030, and 2040. All cancers except nonmelanoma skin cancers (all aged 0-85). The projected number of new cases is presented with red data marks and absolute numbers with the evaluated standard error (2% for Bulgaria, 4% for Croatia, and 2% for Slovenia). (b) Crude rates, all cancers except nonmelanoma skin cancers (all aged 0-85+). Note: Combined crude rate on 100,000 for the 3 SEE countries, was calculated as an average (black squares) of all the available data from each of the 3 countries for males and females. The projected combined crude incidence from the 3 SEE countries was calculated from the linear regression model for 2020, 2030, and 2040 (brown circles) along with the combined standard deviation of 2%. Abbreviations: NMSC = nonmelanoma skin cancers; SEE = South-East European.
Fig. 3Projections of new cancer cases in the South-East European region in the future decades: Comparison of 2 different projection models: (1) Globocan data evaluation methodology (blue bars), and (2) national statistics linear regression model developed from empirical crude incidence of Bulgaria, Croatia, and Slovenia, then applied to the rest of the 7 South-East European countries. (Note 1: national statistics data are taken from Table 1. Note 2: Predictions for Kosovo are unavailable in Globocan source). Abbreviations: GC = Globocan; NS = national statistics.
Projections of cancer incidence
| A country with publicly available cancer registry data (NS) | Population 2020 (million) | NS: extrapolated incidence (data from | GC-Projected incidence | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2020 | 2030 | 2040 | 2020 | 2030 | 2040 | ||
| Bulgaria | 7.05 | 35,710 | 40,309 | 44,907 | 35,366 | 35,258 | 34,504 |
| Croatia | 4.27 | 26,358 | 30,233 | 34,104 | 25,454 | 26,851 | 27,845 |
| Slovenia | 2.08 | 13,027 | 15,367 | 17,708 | 13,934 | 16,004 | 17,417 |
| Combined 3 SEE crude incidence on 100,000 (from | 570 | 658 | 746 | ||||
| A country with no empirical data | NS Projected incidence using combined 3 SEE crude rates | ||||||
| Kosovo | 1.91 | 10,887 | 9,223 | 10,052 | |||
| Montenegro | 0.61 | 3,477 | 4,014 | 4,551 | 2,423 | 2,704 | 2,888 |
| N. Macedonia | 2.08 | 11,856 | 13,686 | 15,517 | 8,048 | 9223 | 10,052 |
| Serbia | 7.08 | 40,356 | 46,586 | 52,817 | 48,471 | 49,682 | 49,273 |
| Albania | 3.05 | 17,385 | 20,069 | 22,753 | 8,604 | 10,049 | 11,197 |
| Bosnia and Herzegovina | 3.85 | 21,945 | 25,333 | 28,721 | 14,771 | 16,638 | 17,231 |
| Greece | 10.76 | 61,332 | 70,801 | 80,270 | 68,725 | 76,568 | 84,507 |
| Total SEE | 42.74 | 242,333 | 278,966 | 315,595 | 233,854 | 252,200 | 264,966 |
| Increase relative to the previous decade | +15% | +13% | |||||
Abbreviations: GC = Globocan; NS =national cancer statistics; SEE = South-East European.
Projections are calculated through (1) NS: available national statistics for Bulgaria, Croatia, and Slovenia, and the 3 SEE country combined crude incidence evaluated with linear regression from Figure 2b. The incidence in Albania, Bosnia and Hercegovina, Greece, Kosovo, Montenegro, North Macedonia, and Serbia was projected from the combined 3 SEE country crude incidence; (2) GC: projected incidences by Globocan. Herein, projections for Kosovo are not available.
Therefore, the data blanks for Kosovo are filled in by copying the Globocan data for North Macedonia.
Unavailable data for Kosovo. Data in the table are duplication of the Globocan data for North Macedonia.
A list of studies for patient selection eligible for HT and their crude incidence in different countries
| No. | Country | New cancer cases and RT candidates | Incidence of candidates for PT on 100,000 | Incidence of candidates for p+ on 100,000 | Incidence of candidates for C-ions on 100,000 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Austria | New = 36,500 | HT = 13.5% of RT | HT = 2044 (all Austria) | |
| 2 | Italy | 25,000 new radioresistant tumors | 10%-15% of radioresistant = 3000-4000 cases | Population 57.5 million population (2005) | |
| 3 | Iran | 2,932 cases | HT = 22.9% of RT | 5,756 eligible for HT, entire Iran | |
| 4 | France | One day study (5 clinics); | HT =77/532 RT | 5.320 eligible for HT, entire France | |
| 5 | France | HT = 12% of RT | 7 cases on 100,000 | 5 cases on 100,000 | |
| 7500 eligible for HT, entire France | |||||
| 5 | Sweden | 31,050 cases | HT = 15% of RT | 2,475 eligible for HT, all Sweden | |
| 6 | Yellow report | First priority protons: 0.8 cases on 100,000 | First priority C-ions: 2 cases on | ||
| Second priority: 5 cases on 100,000 | |||||
| 7 | S. Korea | 4000 eligible for C-ions, all S. Korea | |||
Abbreviations: HT = Hadron therapy; PT = particle therapy; RT = radiation therapy.
Fig. 4Incidence of eligible patients in from South-East European for hadron therapy in 2020, 2030 and 2040 (all ages, all cancers) according to Globocan and national statistics (under the assumption that the population remains 43 million until 2040). Abbreviations: GC = Globocan; HT = hadron therapy; NS = national statistics; RT = radiation therapy; SEEIIST = South-East European International Institute for Sustainable Technologies.