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Late mortality among 5‐year survivors of early onset cancer: A population‐based register study
Author(s) -
Kero Andreina E.,
Järvelä Liisa S.,
Arola Mikko,
Malila Nea,
MadanatHarjuoja Laura M.,
Matomäki Jaakko,
Lähteenmäki Päivi M.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
international journal of cancer
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.475
H-Index - 234
eISSN - 1097-0215
pISSN - 0020-7136
DOI - 10.1002/ijc.29135
Subject(s) - medicine , cancer , population , standardized mortality ratio , malignancy , cohort , cancer registry , disease , cohort study , cause of death , pediatrics , mortality rate , demography , environmental health , sociology
To date, only few studies have been published documenting late mortality among early onset cancer survivors, especially regarding young adulthood (YA) malignancies. Our nation‐wide population‐based registry study provides information concerning cause‐specific long‐term mortality among 16,769 5‐year survivors of early onset cancer (aged 0–34 years at diagnosis), with follow‐up for death extending from 1971 through 2012. A sibling cohort and population data were used as reference. The overall standardized mortality ratio (SMR) of cancer patients was 4.6‐fold, (95% CI 4.4–4.8). Highest SMRs were found for malignancies (12.8, 95% CI 12.3–13.3), infectious (4.8, 95%CI 2.9–6.7) and cardiovascular diseases (1.9, 95% CI 1.7–2.1). Malignancies and cardiovascular diseases accounted for the largest number of deaths. Childhood and YA cancer survivors with the same primary cancer site had a similarly elevated overall SMR with the exception of markedly higher SMRs after childhood Hodgkin lymphoma. The highest cumulative non‐malignancy‐related mortality was due to cardiovascular disease with a steady rise throughout the follow‐up, but strongly dependent on the primary cancer site and age at diagnosis. In childhood cancer survivors, the cumulative cardiovascular mortality did not reduce over time. However, overall and malignancy‐related mortality showed a declining tendency towards the most recent periods after both, childhood and YA cancer. Our findings on non‐malignancy‐related mortality stress the need to set up long‐term individual follow‐up with a focus on cardiovascular late effects for early onset cancer survivors, especially for YA cancer survivors still lacking those.