入射(几何)
医学
人口学
肺癌
流行病学
死亡率
人口
癌症
环境卫生
外科
肿瘤科
病理
内科学
物理
社会学
光学
作者
Junjie Huang,Yunyang Deng,Man Sing Tin,Veeleah Lok,Chun Ho Ngai,Lin Zhang,Don Eliseo Lucero‐Prisno,Wanghong Xu,Zhi‐Jie Zheng,Edmar Elcarte,Mellissa Withers,Martin C. S. Wong
出处
期刊:Chest
[Elsevier]
日期:2022-01-11
卷期号:161 (4): 1101-1111
被引量:103
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.chest.2021.12.655
摘要
Lung cancer ranks second for cancer incidence and first for cancer mortality. Investigation into its risk factors and epidemiologic trends could help describe geographical distribution and identify high-risk population groups.What is the global incidence, mortality, associated risk factors, and temporal trends of lung cancer by sex, age, and country?Data on incidence and mortality were retrieved from the Global Cancer Observatory (GLOBOCAN), Cancer Incidence in Five Continents series I-X, World Health Organization (WHO) mortality database, the Nordic Cancer Registries (NORDCAN), and the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Program (SEER). We searched the WHO Global Health Observatory data repository for age-adjusted prevalence of current smoking. The Average Annual Percentage Change (AAPC) of the trends were obtained by Joinpoint Regression.The age-standardized rate of incidence and mortality were 22.4 and 18.0 per 100,000 globally. The lung cancer incidence and mortality were associated with Human Development Index (HDI), Gross Domestic Products (GDP), and prevalence of smoking. For incidence, more countries had increasing trends in females but decreasing trends in males (AAPC, 1.06 to 6.43 for female; -3.53 to -0.64 for male). A similar pattern was found in those 50 years or older, whereas those aged younger than 50 years had declining incidence trends in both sexes in most countries. For mortality, similar to incidence, 17 of 48 countries showed decreasing trends in males and increasing trends in females (AAPC, -3.28 to -1.32 for male, 0.63 to 3.96 for female).Most countries had increasing trends in females but decreasing trends in males and in lung cancer incidence and mortality. Tobacco related measures and early cancer detection should be implemented to control the increasing trends of lung cancer in females, and in regions identified as having these trends. Future studies may explore the reasons behind these epidemiological transitions.
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