The Global Burden of Cancer 2013

Christina Fitzmaurice(University of Washington), Daniel Dicker(University of Washington), Amanda Pain(University of Washington), Hannah Hamavid(University of Washington), Maziar Moradi‐Lakeh(Iran University of Medical Sciences), Michael F MacIntyre(University of Washington), Christine A. Allen(University of Washington), Gillian M Hansen(University of Washington), Rachel Woodbrook(University of Washington), Charles Wolfe(King's College London), Randah R Hamadeh(Arabian Gulf University), Ami R. Moore(University of North Texas), Andrea Werdecker, Bradford D. Gessner(Agence de Médecine Préventive), Braden Te Ao(Auckland University of Technology), Brian J. McMahon(Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium), Chanté Karimkhani(Columbia University), Chuanhua Yu(Wuhan University), Graham Cooke(Imperial College London), David C. Schwebel(University of Alabama at Birmingham), David O. Carpenter(University at Albany, State University of New York), David M. Pereira(Rede de Química e Tecnologia), Denis Nash(City University of New York), Dhruv S Kazi(University of California, San Francisco), Diego De Leo(Griffith University), Dietrich Plaß(German Environment Agency), Kingsley Nnanna Ukwaja(Federal Teaching Hospital Abakaliki), George D. Thurston(New York University), Kim Yun Jin(Southern University College), Edgar P. Simard(Emory University), Edward J Mills(University of Ottawa), Eun‐Kee Park(Kosin University), Ferrán Catalá-López(Ministry of Health), Gabrielle deVeber(University of Toronto), Carolyn Gotay(University of British Columbia), Gulfaraz Khan(United Arab Emirates University), Hung Chak Ho(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Itamar S Santos(Universidade de São Paulo), Janet L Leasher(Nova Southeastern University), Jasvinder A. Singh(University of Alabama at Birmingham), James Leigh(The University of Sydney), Jost B. Jonas(University of Mannheim), Juan Sanabria(Cancer Treatment Centers of America), Justin Beardsley(Oxford University Clinical Research Unit), Kathryn H. Jacobsen(George Mason University), Ken Takahashi(University of Occupational and Environmental Health Japan), Richard C. Franklin(James Cook University), Luca Ronfani(IRCCS Materno Infantile Burlo Garofolo), Marcella Montico(IRCCS Materno Infantile Burlo Garofolo), Luigi Naldi(Ospedale Papa Giovanni XXIII), Marcello Tonelli(University of Calgary), Johanna M. Geleijnse(Wageningen University & Research), Max Petzold(University of the Witwatersrand), Mark G. Shrime(Harvard University Press), Mustafa Z Younis(Jackson State University), Naohiro Yonemoto(National Center of Neurology and Psychiatry), Nicholas J. K. Breitborde(University of Arizona), Paul Yip(University of Hong Kong), Farshad Pourmalek(University of British Columbia), Paulo A. Lotufo(Universidade de São Paulo), Alireza Esteghamati(Tehran University of Medical Sciences), Graeme J. Hankey(The University of Western Australia), Raghib Ali(University of Oxford), Raimundas Lunevičius(University of Liverpool), Reza Malekzadeh(Tehran University of Medical Sciences), Robert P Dellavalle(VA Eastern Colorado Health Care System), Robert Weintraub(Royal Children's Hospital), Robyn Lucas(Australian National University), Roderick J. Hay(Foundation for International Environmental Law and Development), David Rojas‐Rueda(Center for Research in Environmental Epidemiology), Ronny Westerman(Philipps University of Marburg), Sadaf G Sepanlou(Shariati Hospital), Sandra Nolte(Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin), Scott B. Patten(University of Calgary), Scott Weichenthal(Health Canada), Semaw Ferede Abera(Mekelle University), Seyed-Mohammad Fereshtehnejad(Karolinska Institutet), Ivy Shiue(Northumbria University), Tim Driscoll(The University of Sydney), Tommi Vasankari(Urho Kaleva Kekkonen Institute), Ubai Alsharif(Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin), Vafa Rahimi‐Movaghar(Tehran University of Medical Sciences), Vasily Vlassov(National Research University Higher School of Economics), Wagner Marcenes(Queen Mary University of London), Wubegzier Mekonnen(Addis Ababa University), Yohannes Adama Melaku(Mekelle University), Yuichiro Yano(Northwestern University), Al Artaman, Ismael Campos‐Nonato(Harvard University Press), Jennifer H MacLachlan(Victorian Infectious Diseases Reference Laboratory), Ulrich Müeller(Philipps University of Marburg), Daniel Kim(Northeastern University), Matias Trillini(Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research), Babak Eshrati(Arak University of Medical Sciences), Hywel C Williams(University of Nottingham), Kenji Shibuya(The University of Tokyo), Rakhi Dandona(Public Health Foundation of India), Kinnari Murthy(Public Health Foundation of India), Benjamin Cowie(Victorian Infectious Diseases Reference Laboratory), Azmeraw T. Amare(University of Groningen), Carl Abelardo T. Antonio(University of the Philippines Manila), Carlos A Castañeda-Orjuela(Instituto Nacional de Salud), Coen H. van Gool(National Institute for Public Health and the Environment), Francesco Saverio Violante(University of Bologna), In‐Hwan Oh(Kyung Hee University), Kebede Deribe(Brighton and Sussex Medical School), Kjetil Søreide(Stavanger University Hospital), Luke D. Knibbs(The University of Queensland), Maia Kereselidze(National Center for Disease Control and Public Health), Mark Green(University of Sheffield), Rosario Cárdenas(Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana), Nobhojit Roy, Taavi Tillmann(University College London), Yongmei Li, Hans Krueger(University of British Columbia), Lorenzo Monasta(IRCCS Materno Infantile Burlo Garofolo), Subhojit Dey(Indian Institute of Public Health Gandhinagar), Sara Sheikhbahaei(Tehran University of Medical Sciences), Nima Hafezi‐Nejad(Tehran University of Medical Sciences), G Anil Kumar(Public Health Foundation of India), Chandrashekhar T Sreeramareddy(Universiti Tunku Abdul Rahman), Lalit Dandona(Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation), Haidong Wang(University of Washington), Stein Emil Vollset(Norwegian Institute of Public Health), Ali H. Mokdad(University of Washington), Joshua A. Salomon(Harvard University Press), Rafael Lozano(Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation), Theo Vos(University of Washington), Mohammad H. Forouzanfar(University of Washington), Alan D López(The University of Melbourne), Christopher J L Murray(University of Washington), Mohsen Naghavi(University of Washington)
JAMA Oncology
May 28, 2015
Cited by 2,756Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

IMPORTANCE: Cancer is among the leading causes of death worldwide. Current estimates of cancer burden in individual countries and regions are necessary to inform local cancer control strategies. OBJECTIVE: To estimate mortality, incidence, years lived with disability (YLDs), years of life lost (YLLs), and disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) for 28 cancers in 188 countries by sex from 1990 to 2013. EVIDENCE REVIEW: The general methodology of the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) 2013 study was used. Cancer registries were the source for cancer incidence data as well as mortality incidence (MI) ratios. Sources for cause of death data include vital registration system data, verbal autopsy studies, and other sources. The MI ratios were used to transform incidence data to mortality estimates and cause of death estimates to incidence estimates. Cancer prevalence was estimated using MI ratios as surrogates for survival data; YLDs were calculated by multiplying prevalence estimates with disability weights, which were derived from population-based surveys; YLLs were computed by multiplying the number of estimated cancer deaths at each age with a reference life expectancy; and DALYs were calculated as the sum of YLDs and YLLs. FINDINGS: In 2013 there were 14.9 million incident cancer cases, 8.2 million deaths, and 196.3 million DALYs. Prostate cancer was the leading cause for cancer incidence (1.4 million) for men and breast cancer for women (1.8 million). Tracheal, bronchus, and lung (TBL) cancer was the leading cause for cancer death in men and women, with 1.6 million deaths. For men, TBL cancer was the leading cause of DALYs (24.9 million). For women, breast cancer was the leading cause of DALYs (13.1 million). Age-standardized incidence rates (ASIRs) per 100 000 and age-standardized death rates (ASDRs) per 100 000 for both sexes in 2013 were higher in developing vs developed countries for stomach cancer (ASIR, 17 vs 14; ASDR, 15 vs 11), liver cancer (ASIR, 15 vs 7; ASDR, 16 vs 7), esophageal cancer (ASIR, 9 vs 4; ASDR, 9 vs 4), cervical cancer (ASIR, 8 vs 5; ASDR, 4 vs 2), lip and oral cavity cancer (ASIR, 7 vs 6; ASDR, 2 vs 2), and nasopharyngeal cancer (ASIR, 1.5 vs 0.4; ASDR, 1.2 vs 0.3). Between 1990 and 2013, ASIRs for all cancers combined (except nonmelanoma skin cancer and Kaposi sarcoma) increased by more than 10% in 113 countries and decreased by more than 10% in 12 of 188 countries. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Cancer poses a major threat to public health worldwide, and incidence rates have increased in most countries since 1990. The trend is a particular threat to developing nations with health systems that are ill-equipped to deal with complex and expensive cancer treatments. The annual update on the Global Burden of Cancer will provide all stakeholders with timely estimates to guide policy efforts in cancer prevention, screening, treatment, and palliation.


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