The current and future global burden of cancer among adolescents and young adults: a population-based study

Taylor Hughes, Andrew Harper, Sumit Gupta, A Lindsay Frazier, Winette T A van der Graaf, Florencia Moreno, Adedayo Joseph, Miranda M Fidler-Benaoudia
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Abstract

Background

Compared with children and older adults, the burden of cancer in adolescents and young adults (ages 15–39) is understudied. We aimed to quantify the global burden of adolescent and young adult cancer in 2022 and 2050, and explore patterns in incidence, mortality, and case fatality.

Methods

In this population-based study, we used the GLOBOCAN database to quantify the number of new cases and cancer-related deaths, and corresponding age-standardised incidence and mortality rates (ASRs; per 100 000 people aged 15–39 years), in adolescents and young adults. Estimates were quantified for all cancers combined, excluding non-melanoma skin cancer, and 33 specific cancer types. Case fatality was estimated using mortality-to-incidence ratios. Overall and sex-specific estimates were calculated at the world, regional, human development index (HDI), and income level. We estimated the future cancer burden by applying the GLOBOCAN 2022 rates to sex-specific demographic projections for the year 2050 using the UN World Population Prospects 2019 revision.

Findings

An estimated 1 300 196 cases and 377 621 cancer-related deaths occurred in adolescents and young adults in 2022. Incidence ASRs were 1·9-times higher and mortality ASRs were 1·2-times higher in females than in males (incidence ASR 52·9 vs 28·3; mortality ASR 13·1 vs 10·6). Although the incidence ASR was highest in the high-income countries, the mortality ASR was highest in the low-income countries; as a result, case fatality ranged from 12% in high-income settings to 57% in low-income settings. Of the 33 cancer types included in our analyses, breast or cervical cancer was the most frequently diagnosed cancer and cause of cancer-related death in 163 and 93 countries, respectively; incidence and mortality also varied the most by region for these cancers. Finally, the adolescent and young adult cancer burden globally is projected to increase by about 12% from 2022 to 2050, albeit with declines of 10·7% projected in very high HDI countries. The increase is expected to overwhelmingly impact low HDI settings, where the burden of both cancer cases and deaths is projected to double (a 102·3% increase).

Interpretation

Although the adolescent and young adult cancer burden incidence is highest in the most developed settings, transitioning countries have the poorest outcomes and will face the greatest increases in burden by 2050. These findings act as a reference to the global adolescent and young adult cancer community to inform cancer control priorities and decrease global inequities.

Funding

None.
当前和未来全球青少年癌症负担:一项基于人口的研究
背景与儿童和老年人相比,青少年和年轻成人(15-39 岁)的癌症负担研究不足。我们的目标是量化 2022 年和 2050 年全球青少年和青壮年癌症负担,并探索发病率、死亡率和病死率的模式。方法在这项基于人群的研究中,我们利用 GLOBOCAN 数据库量化了青少年和青壮年的新发病例和癌症相关死亡人数,以及相应的年龄标准化发病率和死亡率(ASRs;每 10 万名 15-39 岁人群)。对所有癌症(不包括非黑色素瘤皮肤癌)和 33 种特定癌症类型进行了量化估算。病死率采用死亡率与发病率之比进行估算。按世界、地区、人类发展指数(HDI)和收入水平计算了总体和特定性别的估计值。我们根据联合国《世界人口展望》2019 年修订版,将 GLOBOCAN 2022 年的发病率应用于 2050 年特定性别的人口预测,从而估算出未来的癌症负担。女性的发病率和死亡率分别是男性的 1-9 倍和 1-2 倍(发病率 ASR 52-9 对 28-3;死亡率 ASR 13-1 对 10-6)。虽然高收入国家的发病率 ASR 最高,但低收入国家的死亡率 ASR 最高;因此,病死率从高收入国家的 12% 到低收入国家的 57% 不等。在我们分析的 33 种癌症类型中,乳腺癌和宫颈癌分别是 163 个国家和 93 个国家中最常诊断出的癌症和癌症相关死亡的原因;这些癌症的发病率和死亡率在不同地区的差异也最大。最后,预计从 2022 年到 2050 年,全球青少年和年轻成年人的癌症负担将增加约 12%,尽管在人类发展指数非常高的国家预计会下降 10-7%。虽然青少年癌症发病率在最发达地区最高,但转型期国家的结果最差,到 2050 年将面临最大的负担增长。这些发现为全球青少年和年轻成人癌症社区提供了参考,为癌症控制优先事项提供信息,减少全球不平等现象。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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