Article

Trends in the survival of patients diagnosed with cancers in the respiratory system in the Nordic countries 1964-2003 followed up to the end of 2006.

Finnish Cancer Registry, Pieni Roobertinkatu 9, Helsinki, Finland.
Acta oncologica (Stockholm, Sweden) (impact factor: 2.27). 02/2010; 49(5):608-23. DOI:10.3109/02841860903575281 pp.608-23
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT Previous studies have shown that there have been systematic differences between the Nordic countries in population-based relative survival of patients with respiratory cancer (lung, pleura, larynx, nose and sinuses).
Relative survival of patients with respiratory cancer diagnosed in the Nordic countries in 1964-2003 and followed up to the end of 2006 was studied and contrasted with developments in incidence and mortality.
For cancer of the lung, relative survival is lower in Danish patients than in the other countries during the first months of follow-up after diagnosis. For cancer of pleura, the relative survival ratios indicate that there may be problems in the official coding of the causes of death in Denmark, Norway and Sweden. There has been little improvement in survival of patients with cancer of the respiratory organs in the Nordic countries over time.
The slightly lower survival of Danish lung cancer patients may be related to a less favourable stage distribution and to an increased prevalence of causal factors, affecting the mortality due to competing risks of death. A reclassification of official causes of death at the cancer registry may be needed for cancer of the pleura in order to make the corresponding mortality rates comparable between countries.

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Keywords

cancer registry
 
causal factors
 
corresponding mortality rates comparable
 
countries
 
Danish lung cancer patients
 
Danish patients
 
favourable stage distribution
 
first months
 
increased prevalence
 
lower survival
 
Nordic countries
 
official causes
 
patients
 
population-based relative survival
 
Previous studies
 
relative survival
 
relative survival ratios
 
respiratory cancer
 
respiratory organs
 
sinuses