4.7 Article

Causes of death among cancer patients

Journal

ANNALS OF ONCOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 2, Pages 400-407

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1093/annonc/mdw604

Keywords

cancer; comorbidity; heart disease; mortality; SEER; second cancer; United States; non-cancer death; competing events; clinical trials; epidemiology

Categories

Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute, NIH [P30 CA006927]
  2. National Cancer Institute, NIH [P30 CA006927]

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Background: The purpose of our study was to characterize the causes of death among cancer patients as a function of objectives: (i) calendar year, (ii) patient age, and (iii) time after diagnosis. Patients and methods: US death certificate data in Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Stat 8.2.1 were used to categorize cancer patient death as being due to index-cancer, nonindex-cancer, and noncancer cause from 1973 to 2012. In addition, data were characterized with standardized mortality ratios (SMRs), which provide the relative risk of death compared with all persons. Results: The greatest relative decrease in index-cancer death (generally from> 60% to< 30%) was among those with cancers of the testis, kidney, bladder, endometrium, breast, cervix, prostate, ovary, anus, colorectum, melanoma, and lymphoma. Indexcancer deaths were stable (typically> 40%) among patients with cancers of the liver, pancreas, esophagus, and lung, and brain. Noncancer causes of death were highest in patients with cancers of the colorectum, bladder, kidney, endometrium, breast, prostate, testis;> 40% of deaths from heart disease. The highest SMRs were from nonbacterial infections, particularly among< 50-year olds (e. g. SMR> 1,000 for lymphomas, P< 0.001). The highest SMRs were typically within the first year after cancer diagnosis (SMRs 10-10,000, P< 0.001). Prostate cancer patients had increasing SMRs from Alzheimer's disease, as did testicular patients from suicide. Conclusion: The risk of death from index-and nonindex-cancers varies widely among primary sites. Risk of noncancer deaths now surpasses that of cancer deaths, particularly for young patients in the year after diagnosis.

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