1935- 1982年康涅狄格州癌症登记和多发性原发癌症研究。

National Cancer Institute monograph Pub Date : 1985-12-01
J T Flannery, J D Boice, S S Devesa, R A Kleinerman, R E Curtis, J F Fraumeni
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引用次数: 0

摘要

康涅狄格肿瘤登记处(CTR)成立于1941年,是世界上最古老的基于人口的癌症登记处。自1935年以来,所有恶性肿瘤都进行了登记,每年对癌症患者的生命状况进行随访。从1971年开始,医院必须报告康涅狄格州居民诊断出的所有癌症。报告的医生或医院对肿瘤是否为独立的原发癌、复发性肿瘤或转移性病变作出初步判断。此外,本处设有严格的质量控制程序,以避免癌症报告重复。登记处回顾了既往原发癌症患者发生新癌症的报告,以排除误诊转移的可能性。显微镜下诊断的确认率从1935-39年的49%提高到1980-82年的94%。仅从死亡证明中报告的癌症目前仅占所有登记的1%。1935年至1979年间,康涅狄格州男性的癌症发病率几乎翻了一番,女性的癌症发病率增加了三分之一以上;男性肺癌和前列腺癌以及女性肺癌和乳腺癌的发病率显著上升。近年来,男性和女性患皮肤恶性黑色素瘤的比率急剧上升。随着时间的推移,男女的胃癌发病率都在下降,女性的宫颈癌发病率也在下降。尽管CTR使用了《国际疾病分类》的几次修订来对癌症的原发部位进行编码,但对多种原发癌症进行编码的规则基本保持不变。在1935年至1982年间诊断为浸润性癌症的253,536例患者中,评估了16,727例(6.6%)非同时的第二种癌症,并在本专著的后续章节中进行了讨论。同时诊断出癌症的有4107人,约占康涅狄格州报告的所有多发性癌症的20%。最常见的同时发生的肿瘤是结肠癌、直肠癌、前列腺癌、肺癌、乳腺癌和膀胱癌。一些同时发生的癌症(慢性淋巴细胞白血病、睾丸、前列腺、直肠、子宫体、肝脏和胆道)发生的频率几乎与随后发生的非同时发生的肿瘤的数量一样多,这表明,随着时间的推移,某些部位的风险模式可能会被及时诊断并从分析中剔除。(摘要删节为400字)
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Cancer registration in Connecticut and the study of multiple primary cancers, 1935-82.

The Connecticut Tumor Registry (CTR) was established in 1941 and is the oldest population-based cancer registry in the world. Since 1935, all malignant tumors have been registered, and cancer patients are followed annually for vital status. Reporting by hospitals of all cancers diagnosed in Connecticut residents became mandatory in 1971. The reporting physician or hospital makes the initial determination as to whether a tumor is an independent primary cancer, recurrent tumor, or metastatic lesion. In addition, the Registry maintains stringent quality control procedures to avoid duplication of cancer reports. The Registry reviews reports of new cancers developing in patients with a previous primary cancer to rule out the possibility of misdiagnosed metastases. Microscopic confirmation of the diagnosis has improved from 49% in 1935-39 to 94% in 1980-82. Cancers reported only from death certificates currently account for only 1% of all registrations. Between 1935 and 1979, cancer rates in Connecticut almost doubled among males and increased by more than one-third among females; notable increases were seen for cancers of the lung and prostate in males and cancers of the lung and breast in females. In recent years, rates for malignant melanoma of the skin have increased dramatically among both sexes. Stomach cancer has decreased over time in both sexes, as has cervical cancer in females. Although the CTR has used several revisions of the International Classification of Diseases to code the primary site of cancers, rules for the coding of multiple primary cancers have remained essentially the same. Among 253,536 individuals diagnosed between 1935 and 1982 with an invasive cancer, 16,727 (6.6%) nonsimultaneous second cancers were evaluated and are discussed in subsequent chapters of this monograph. Simultaneous cancers were diagnosed in 4,107 individuals and accounted for approximately 20% of all multiple cancers reported in Connecticut. The most frequent simultaneous tumors were cancers of the colon, rectum, prostate, lung, breast, and bladder. Some simultaneous cancers (chronic lymphocytic leukemia, testis, prostate, rectum, uterine corpus, and liver and biliary tract) occurred almost as frequently as the number of subsequent nonsimultaneous tumors, which suggests that the patterns of risk over time for certain sites may be distorted when diagnoses are advanced in time and removed from analysis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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