In:
Journal of Clinical Oncology, American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), Vol. 38, No. 15_suppl ( 2020-05-20), p. e21572-e21572
Abstract:
e21572 Background: No assessment was conducted describing the age and gender specific epidemiology of lung cancer (LC) prior to 2018 in Hungary, thus the objective of this study was to appraise the detailed epidemiology of lung cancer (ICD-10 C34) in Hungary based on a retrospective analysis of the National Health Insurance Fund database. Methods: This longitudinal study included patients aged ≥20 years with LC diagnosis (ICD-10 C34) between 1 st January 2011 and 31 th December 2016. Patients with different cancer-related codes 6 months before or 12 months after LC diagnosis or having any anti-cancer treatment different from lung cancer protocols were excluded. Results: In 2011, 4,522 new male lung cancer cases were registered in the NHIF database, while we found 4,176 incident patients in 2016. The number of female patients increased from 2,636 to 2,828 during the same period. The mean age at diagnosis was 64.51 years for men (SD±9.85) and 64.93 years for women (SD±11.19) in 2011, increasing steadily to 65.80 years (SD±9.41) and 65.99 years (SD±10.45), respectively. Lung cancer incidence and mortality increases with age, peaking in the 70–79 age group (375.0/100,000 person-years) among males, while at 60–69 age group for females (148.1/100,000 person-years). The male-to-female incidence rate ratio reached 2.46 to 3.01 (p 〈 0.0001) among the 70–79 age group. We found 2-11% decrease in male incidence rate at most age groups, while a significant 1-3% increase was observed in older females ( 〉 60) annually during the study period. Conclusions: This nationwide epidemiology study demonstrated that LC incidence and mortality in Hungary is decreasing in younger male and female population, however we found significant increase of incidence in older female population, similar to international trends. Incidence rates peaked in younger age-groups compared to Western countries, most likely due to higher smoking prevalence in these cohorts, while lower age LC incidence could be attributed to higher competing cardiovascular risk resulting in earlier mortality in smoking population.
Type of Medium:
Online Resource
ISSN:
0732-183X
,
1527-7755
DOI:
10.1200/JCO.2020.38.15_suppl.e21572
Language:
English
Publisher:
American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)
Publication Date:
2020
detail.hit.zdb_id:
2005181-5
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