The english version of the website is under development. Wherever text appears in Greek, it means it has not been translated yet.

Δημοσίευση

Mortality and survival patterns of childhood lymphomas: geographic and age-specific patterns in Southern-Eastern European and SEER/US registration data.

TitleMortality and survival patterns of childhood lymphomas: geographic and age-specific patterns in Southern-Eastern European and SEER/US registration data.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2017
AuthorsKaralexi, M. A., Georgakis M. K., Dessypris N., Ryzhov A., Zborovskaya A., Dimitrova N., Zivkovic S., Eser S., Antunes L., Sekerija M., Zagar T., Bastos J., Demetriou A., Agius D., Florea M., Coza D., Bouka E., Dana H., Hatzipantelis E., Kourti M., Moschovi M., Polychronopoulou S., Stiakaki E., Pourtsidis A., & Petridou E. Th
JournalHematol Oncol
Volume35
Issue4
Pagination608-618
Date Published2017 Dec
ISSN1099-1069
KeywordsAdolescent, Age Factors, Child, Child, Preschool, Europe, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Kaplan-Meier Estimate, Lymphoma, Male, Population Surveillance, Proportional Hazards Models, Registries, SEER Program, United States
Abstract

Childhood (0-14 years) lymphomas, nowadays, present a highly curable malignancy compared with other types of cancer. We used readily available cancer registration data to assess mortality and survival disparities among children residing in Southern-Eastern European (SEE) countries and those in the United States. Average age-standardized mortality rates and time trends of Hodgkin (HL) and non-Hodgkin (NHL; including Burkitt [BL]) lymphomas in 14 SEE cancer registries (1990-2014) and the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Program (SEER, United States; 1990-2012) were calculated. Survival patterns in a total of 8918 cases distinguishing also BL were assessed through Kaplan-Meier curves and multivariate Cox regression models. Variable, rather decreasing, mortality trends were noted among SEE. Rates were overall higher than that in SEER (1.02/10 ), which presented a sizeable (-4.8%, P = .0001) annual change. Additionally, remarkable survival improvements were manifested in SEER (10 years: 96%, 86%, and 90% for HL, NHL, and BL, respectively), whereas diverse, still lower, rates were noted in SEE. Non-HL was associated with a poorer outcome and an amphi-directional age-specific pattern; specifically, prognosis was inferior in children younger than 5 years than in those who are 10 to 14 years old from SEE (hazard ratio 1.58, 95% confidence interval 1.28-1.96) and superior in children who are 5 to 9 years old from SEER/United States (hazard ratio 0.63, 95% confidence interval 0.46-0.88) than in those who are 10 to 14 years old. In conclusion, higher SEE lymphoma mortality rates than those in SEER, but overall decreasing trends, were found. Despite significant survival gains among developed countries, there are still substantial geographic, disease subtype-specific, and age-specific outcome disparities pointing to persisting gaps in the implementation of new treatment modalities and indicating further research needs.

DOI10.1002/hon.2347
Alternate JournalHematol Oncol
PubMed ID27641612

Contact

Secretariat of the School of Medicine
 

Connect

School of Medicine's presence in social networks
Follow Us or Connect with us.