Survival in oral and pharyngeal cancers is catching up with laryngeal cancer in the NORDIC countries through a half century
Author
Koskinen, Anni I.
Hemminki, Otto
Publication date
2024Published in
Cancer MedicineVolume / Issue
13 (1)ISBN / ISSN
ISSN: 2045-7634ISBN / ISSN
eISSN: 2045-7634Metadata
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This publication has a published version with DOI 10.1002/cam4.6867
Abstract
Background: Cancers of the head and neck (HN) are heterogeneous tumors with incidence rates varying globally. In Northern Europe oral and oropharyngeal cancers are the most common individual types. Survival for HN varies by individual tumor type but for most of them survival trends are not well known over extended periods of time. Methods: Data for a retrospective survival study were obtained for Danish, Finnish, Norwegian, and Swedish patients from the NORDCAN database from 1971 to 2020. Relative 1- and 5-year survival rates and 5/1-year conditional survival for years 2-5 were calculated. Results: Both 1- and 5-year survival improved for all HN cancers but only marginally for laryngeal cancer. For the other cancers a 50-year increase in 5-year survival was about 30% units for nasopharyngeal and oropharyngeal cancers, 20% units for oral cancer and somewhat less for hypopharyngeal cancer. Conclusions: 5-year survival reached about 65% for all HN cancers, except for hypopharyngeal cancer (30%). Human papilloma virus infection is becoming a dominant risk factor for the rapidly increasing oropharyngeal cancer, the prevention of which needs to emphasize oral sex as a route of infection.
Keywords
conditional survival, human papilloma virus, oral cancer, pharyngeal cancer
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14178/2681License
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