Incidence and survival of retinoblastoma in Taiwan: a nationwide population-based study 1998–2011

LI Su-yin(Chia-Yi Christian Hospital), Solomon Chih‐Cheng Chen(Chia-Yi Christian Hospital), Ching-Fang Tsai(Chia-Yi Christian Hospital), Shew‐Meei Sheu(Chia-Yi Christian Hospital), Jun‐Jun Yeh(Chia-Yi Christian Hospital), Chong‐Bin Tsai(Chia-Yi Christian Hospital)
British Journal of Ophthalmology
September 14, 2015
Cited by 30Open Access
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Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To study the epidemiology of retinoblastoma in Taiwan from 1998 to 2011. DESIGN: This was a retrospective population-based cohort study using the Taiwan National Health Insurance Research Database. RESULTS: The present study included 154 patients (92 males, 62 females) with retinoblastoma and the documented overall retinoblastoma incidence was 1 in 17 373 live births without a notable trend over the study period. The incidence per million live births examined by gender was 65.8 for males and 48.5 for females. The age-specific sex ratio increased from 1.4 at age younger than 1 year to 3.0 above age 4 years. Enucleation was performed in 109 (70.8%) children with retinoblastoma, and it was more prevalent in males than in females (77.2% vs 61.3%, p=0.0335). Multivariate Cox regression analyses with adjustment for diagnostic age, sex, and birth year elucidated that enucleation was a significant factor associated with survival (OR 0.27, 95% CI 0.10 to 0.61). CONCLUSIONS: The incidence of retinoblastoma in Taiwan exhibited no marked trend over time. There were more cases of males than females and the male-to-female rate ratio increased with age. Survival outcome was significantly associated with the intervention of enucleation.


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